Greg Paulus leading his 2nd team in 2nd sport

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SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)—A year ago, he was preparing for basketball season as a senior point guard at powerhouse Duke. Today, he’s halfway through a stint quarterbacking Syracuse, a storied but struggling program.

Greg Paulus has had a rare collegiate journey—a captain at two Division I schools in different sports. He’s relished the role in both settings.

“The responsibility of being a leader and putting others before yourself is the same,” Paulus said before practice in the Carrier Dome last week. “You’ve got to be the first one to get there, the last one to leave, showing by example that you’re willing to sacrifice, do whatever you need to for the team.”

Before this season, Paulus hadn’t played football competitively since he was named 2004 national high school player of the year. The fact that he not only returned to the game, but did it in his hometown has excited fans in Syracuse.

“This has been a joy for our whole community. We were hoping it was going to happen. It’s unbelievable,” said John Wleklinski, athletic director and basketball coach at Christian Brothers Academy, where Paulus was a two-sport star (he played varsity basketball as an eighth-grader). “He’s grown up with us. We watched him go from seventh and eighth grade—we knew he had potential— to Duke where he had a great career to now. Whoever would have thought?”

Certainly not Paulus. Last spring, he was mulling the possibility of playing pro basketball in Europe and then becoming a coach, when a scout for the Green Bay Packers called his apartment.

The NFL didn’t work out, but playing one year of college football quickly became a reality. Paulus received an NCAA waiver to use his final year of athletic eligibility as a graduate student and chose Syracuse because of its Newhouse School of Public Communications, and because there was a better chance to get on the field with the Orange than with Duke.

Syracuse had won just 10 games in four years under Greg Robinson, and new coach Doug Marrone offered Paulus no guarantees about playing time.

“He came in here understanding that and knowing that there was a job to be won and he would have to compete for that,” Syracuse offensive coordinator Rob Spence said. It didn’t take long for Paulus to win the job—Marrone named Paulus the starter barely a week into preseason camp. He was elected one of four captains by his teammates soon after.

“In the summertime, he showed a lot of qualities of being a leader,” senior wideout Donte Davis said. “I guess that comes with being a point guard, too, at Duke. He was leading. People were looking up to him.”

Spence said that even if Paulus hadn’t won the top job, he commands so much respect that he still would have been voted a captain.

“He has a unique gift of being able to connect with people,” Spence said. “That’s, obviously, an invaluable part of leadership and a quality that’s necessary for a leader to have. He’s one of those guys that makes friends like bakers make cookies, and people recognize that immediately. That gives him a chance to get around people he doesn’t know and direct them and lead them and get them going in the right direction.”

For Paulus, it was all about doing what comes naturally.

“The positions of quarterback and point guard are very similar,” said Paulus, whose Duke teams twice made it as far as the round of 16 in the NCAA basketball tournament. “From a leadership standpoint to the intangibles to physically doing it for your guys, it’s the same.”

There have been plenty of ups and downs since Paulus and the Orange took the field: Their record now stands at 3-4, as many wins as they had all last year, headed into a matchup against fifth-ranked Cincinnati. Through it all, Paulus has displayed his aw-shucks smile more often than not.

Syracuse’s first offensive snap of the season—against Minnesota—sailed far over his head. The Gophers recovered and led 7-0 when the game was 19 seconds old. Paulus and the Orange wound up forcing overtime before he threw an interception into triple coverage in the end zone in the first extra period, essentially giving the game away.

“I’m going to make mistakes and I’m trying to learn from them,” Paulus said. “There’s not a lot of time. I’m trying to take advantage of every practice, every meeting, every game.”

After a 28-7 loss at Penn State, Paulus passed for 346 yards—the sixth-highest total for a single game in school history—to rally the Orange to a 37-34 victory over Northwestern. Then he guided them to a tougher-than-expected victory over Maine as Syracuse reached .500 for the first time in three years.

“It’s a great investment,” Maine coach Jack Cosgrove said. “Do you go with a fifth-year guy for one year or do you invest in a young player? That had to have been a question. Boy, they nailed this one because this kid is good. He’s really good.”

In the first two games of Big East play, home losses to South Florida and West Virginia, Paulus often looked like a raw freshman, with flashes of great play hurt by a bunch on mistakes. He threw two TD passes against the Bulls, who hadn’t allowed any in their first four games, but was intercepted six times in the two games.

After an awful first-half performance against West Virginia—Paulus was 5 of 9 for 30 yards and one interception—he watched the second half of the Orange’s 34-13 loss from the bench. Just as he did when he lost his job as the starting point guard for the Blue Devils, he cheered his teammates on every play.

He was back in his starting role last Saturday against Akron, finishing 12 of 17 for 105 yards and a TD in a Syracuse win.

“The main thing I see in Greg is that he’s having fun and he’s a great team player,” said Duke basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, who talks to Paulus about once a week. “His team isn’t a great team. It’s a team that’s building. They’re building a program there, and Greg being there and doing what he’s doing has moved their program up.

“He’ll leave his DNA on that program in a very positive way,” Krzyzewski said.

Marrone and Spence agree. The quarterback position in major college football is incredibly complicated, and Paulus has learned quickly.

“I’ve said this many times, but it’s remarkable (what Paulus has done),” Marrone said. “You have to remember he did not play spring ball with us.”

For his part, Paulus says he’s focused on only one thing.

“I don’t look at the numbers. I look at the result. That’s the most important thing,” he said. “We don’t care how we get it done. We just want to win, and I guess having a little bit of a contribution to that is a good thing.

“This team is heading in the right direction,” Paulus said. “We’ve got to keep building and pushing one another.”

AP Sports Writer Joedy McCreary in Raleigh, N.C. contributed to this report.

Updated Oct 28, 1:50 pm EDT
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245 Comments

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    DerekM Wed Oct 28, 2009 11:01 am PDT Report Abuse
    Paulus doing his best to show that he can suck at two different college sports. Maybe he still has the taste of Danny Green's balls in his mouth.
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    __A_YAHOO_USER__ Wed Oct 28, 2009 09:28 am PDT Report Abuse
    Paulus: Please lead Syracuse to victories over Cincinnati and Pitt, and you will be elected mayor of South Bend.

    Just two more wins the next two weeks is all The Irish ask.....
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    GrantY Sun Sep 06, 2009 04:04 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Dawgmeat you're a loser.
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    JS Sat Sep 05, 2009 01:00 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Richard is a real Dick
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    Greg Sat Sep 05, 2009 11:29 am PDT Report Abuse
    Paulus was an average bball player. end of story. the fact that he played at Duke does nothing for me. they too are mediocre now which is fantastic. Was it a smart move to transition to FB ? yes, especially since he didnt want to move to europe to continue his career. Will he be a good QB ? We will know soon. The argument that he was a good QB in HS is BS. I agree with Richard - I hope he gets pancaked every night but I'm curious enough to see how he does.
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    yanks Sat Sep 05, 2009 11:07 am PDT Report Abuse
    ill tell you what he looks real good so far..i know its only a half but a much better and most of all balanced team...again only 1 half
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    Richard Sat Sep 05, 2009 10:59 am PDT Report Abuse
    Can you flop in football? All this talk about what a leader he was at Dook is BS, he started 3 years and then barely got on the floor his senior year....but Dook has a history of not developing players...so not a surprise. So his options were to play in Europe, or give football a shot. He did have great credentials coming out of high school, and is no doubt an upgrade for Syracuse at QB, but I'm skeptical....and a Tar Heel.....so I hope he gets pancaked on a weekly basis.
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    MATTW Thu Aug 27, 2009 08:50 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Any one who states that he will be no good is not very smart. The kid was hands down the best high school QB four years ago and if not the best football player in the country. U act like he sat in jail for four years and tried to make a comeback. He Learned how to lead one of the most hated teams in college basketball and Leadership too me is more important than time on the field. He is a natural athlete with better work ethic and lets see he got a degree from duke! hum so he is a smart kid, who played 4 years of basketball at top level and is in better shape than he was coming out of high school. Use ur brains when speaking on a subject. I wish some how UNC are the syracuse could play in a bowl game so once again tar heel fans could boo him. hahaha love this kid!
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    Numero Uno Stunna Thu Aug 27, 2009 08:01 pm PDT Report Abuse
    I hope he shocks me and other syracuse fans cause we are starting to get desperate now.
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    gatornation8 Thu Aug 27, 2009 01:29 pm PDT Report Abuse
    I've always hated Duke and everything about them, but I have to root for Paulus this time around. It's an unbelievable story that someone can take four years off from a sport and then just walk in and start for a Division 1 team, especially one that's a major school in a good conference. If he was playing for like Troy or Wyoming then who cares but he's playing for a legitimate program (McNabb, Harrison, Freeney, etc). I hope he does well this year and people get off his back.

    Go Gators.
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    Tommy Fri Aug 21, 2009 06:56 am PDT Report Abuse
    Yes it will be funny to watch him get leveled and then look around for a late hit call like he did at duke. whining little baby like hurley was. most duke players are whining babies which is why most don't cut it in the nba. enjoy playing for the cuse greggy. i predict a 2-10 record and 3 int's your first game.
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    JJ Hardy Thu Aug 20, 2009 06:27 pm PDT Report Abuse
    I'm looking forward to that first game where Paulus gets planted on his back and looks around for the foul like he did at Duke. At least I won't have to hear Dicky V ramble about how great of a football player he was seconds before he whipped a pass 6 feet to the side of his intended target and into the stands.
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    Nick Thu Aug 20, 2009 12:53 pm PDT Report Abuse
    dan p -

    Sexton's situation is totally different from Paulus's.

    Paulus exhausted all his four years of playing eligibility at Duke, and is now a graduate student with Syracuse that appealed to the NCAA to play football. Think of it as him "going out for the team" as a grad student for one year.

    Sexton, on the other hand, left the team with one year of playing eligibility remaining (redshirt junior, which is what makes him different from being a true senior and graduating this past year). Since he had that one year of playing eligibility left, he had to go to a D-II school to finish out his career.
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    Dawgmeat Thu Aug 20, 2009 08:21 am PDT Report Abuse
    Juli ...... were you even around to comprehend what was going on in 1992 ? i remember it clear as day. Gino Toretta was NEVER expected to do a damned thing in the NFL .... EVERYBODY projected he would be bagging groceries. the Vikings stunned many experts by drafting him at all. in no way shape or form .... was Gino Toretta a bust. you cant say, well because he was drafted that means he shouldve been good. how many 7th round picks actually make their clubs ???? i havent done any type of research on it .... but id guess the number is around 10%. the last pick of the 7th round isnt called Mr. Irrelevant for nothing. i couldnt stand Gino when he played for Miami .... i thought he was a punk. but punk or not .... he wasnt a bust. how can somebody be a bust when they werent expected to do anything in the first place ?????

    i do agree about Brock Huard .... not in terms of being a bust ..... i would consider him a moderate bust at best. but personally .... i thought he had talent. that guy had a rocket arm, ive seen him throw it effortlessly 80 yards downfield. thats ..... 80 yards in the air. Brocks problem was he couldnt take an NFL hit. he had the arm, he had the brain ..... just couldnt take an NFL hit. far many more busts than Huard though. hell, Andre Ware and David Klingsbury were supposed to save the Raiders franchise. what about Akili Smith ?????? you cant possibly tell me Huard was a bigger bust than any other those three.
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    David Thu Aug 20, 2009 07:30 am PDT Report Abuse
    Heath Shuler is in the top three of all-Time busts.My choice for #1 is Ryan Leaf.He had 10 times more Hype than shuler.Shuler should have stayed another year in school.Ryan Leaf had the Big Head and was@#$%y.Even Jim Rome said Leaf was better than Peyton Manning.As for as having all the physical tools Ryan Leaf was probably the better college quarterback.Right now there is no comparision.
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    Juli Thu Aug 20, 2009 04:45 am PDT Report Abuse
    Dawgmeat I have no dillusions that about expectations relative to the success a player had in college. What I am saying is that these guys were drafted into the NFL, that alone assumes high expecations. Some guys had respectable careers and nothing wong with that. But I am sorry if you got drafted in the NFL and then were let go by two teams in your first two years because they saw how terrible you were and you atempted all of 16 NFL passes, then you fooled somebody to get there. Everything I have read about Torreta coaches said they were in shock during practices at how clueless this guy was. They said it was clear from the start this guy had no business being in the NFL. Torreta is a great guy, he is smart and has been a success in business after his football career but lets be honest the guy was just an averag athlete that really fell into the Heisman and the NFL.

    When I think of my personal list of big time busts I personally think Heath Shuler was the biggest bust ever in my lifetime. He went No. 3 in the draft and never did anything. He threw for 1,600 yards in his NFL career yet made millions, you gotta love that. Druckenmiller out of Va. Tech I thought was going to be the next great NFL QB, oh my God did this guy bomb, he survived 5 years and threw for whopping 689 yards in his NFL career. and my No. 3 pick is Brock Huard, he was selected in the 3rd round and another I really thought was going to rock the NFL but this guys career was only slightly better than Gino Torretas.

    Think about all the millions of dollars Brock Huard, Heath Shuler, Andre Ware, Druckenmiller, Gino Torreta etc made and not one of them developed into a productive NFL QB.
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    Old Fart Thu Aug 20, 2009 04:17 am PDT Report Abuse
    I don't know the young man, but I'll bet he always dreamed of playing for Syracuse...it's good to see someone realizing his dream. He worked hard at Duke and now he's got the chance to play where he really wanted to play. GOOD LUCK and congratulations! Now go have fun!
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    Director Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:56 pm PDT Report Abuse
    The reason there are so many busts in the NFL is that the NFL is still in the stone age as far as evaluating talent. No one in the NFL has been able to apply anything like the analytical rigor to football that Bill James and Billy Bean brought to baseball. I know the games and stats are different, but at every level football coaches get lured into the myth that they can look at a player's physique and non-football skills, such as forty times and bench, pick the most effective players.

    It would be like picking stocks based on how good of an orator the CEO is and the layout of the corporate website. Both those things, like 40s and BP, can be helpful to a company, but they really don't tell you anything about the company's future profitablity.

    The core problem is that football is so much about determination, football sense, and chemistry, and even worse athletic talent, particularly speed, can really obscure the first two of these qualities. Chemistry is always hard to quantify, but clearly there are some guys that play better with one team than another even when the schemes are the same. When you consider we are talking about 21 and 22 year olds who just became instant millionaires it's amazing that teams ever get it right.

    I don't have a solution or I would be the GM somewhere, but I think the Patriots have done better than most teams. I think in the draft I would mostly look for performance against top talent and clutch performance as my starting spot and save 40 times, BP and all to break the ties: Not the other way around.
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    Mrs Bon Bon Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:04 pm PDT Report Abuse
    not a HATER - if it puts some butts in the seats at the Carrierdome for a change - more power to the Orange -

    BUT- its NOT good for a D1 school like Syracuse in a top conference like the Big East opening the season at home in roughly 15 days and their starting QB is STILL claiming he is LEARNING THE OFFENSE!!!!!!!

    Im sorry to say Minnesota must be like a pack of Dogs ready to Feast -

    It could be lambs to the slaughter.............and it could get ugly!

    Season is long hope they turn it around, but I dont have high hopes for them to hit the ground running.......
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    don the dean Wed Aug 19, 2009 08:44 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Way to go looner....Don;t forget that Coach Marrone was Drew's coach....I guess he knows something about undersized QBs that the whiners don't....
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    Lind Wed Aug 19, 2009 08:12 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Well said none!!!! Very well said!!!!
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    none Wed Aug 19, 2009 07:51 pm PDT Report Abuse
    i liked paulus at duke despite the fact that im not a blue devil fan. he always played w/ a lot of heart and stayed composed despite being jj reddicks replacement as the most hated player in the ACC, if not the country. The fact that he can step into a BCS conference and earn a starting job is really a testament to him as an athlete. Apparently everyone posting a comment on this page is either a hater or a tar heel. Give the guy some credit, after all, did anybody outside of new york really care about syracuse football until this happened?
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    dan p Wed Aug 19, 2009 05:46 pm PDT Report Abuse
    How can Paulus play quarterback at a div. 1 school when NC quarterback Cam Sexton graduated the same as Paulus with one year of eligibility and had to transfer to a div 2 school to play ? He was already a QB - wtf is the difference?
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    dan p Wed Aug 19, 2009 05:44 pm PDT Report Abuse
    How can Paulus play quarterback at a div. 1 school when NC quarterback Cam Sexton graduated the same as Paulus with one year of eligibility and had to transfer to a div 2 school to play ? He was already a QB - wtf is the difference?
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    Andrew Wed Aug 19, 2009 04:47 pm PDT Report Abuse
    Paulus........please!!!!! If Duke taught him basketball so well, he should be in the NBA, but he didn't make it. He needs to go to Europe or somewhere and play there. He needs to go away. Leave the orange men alone as they have a QB already. It is very disrespectful to just walk in and be first string especially if you don't know the players and the offense. Is he Favre. The original QB should leave. Duke prepared him to play QB. WHAT!!!!!!! Get outahere.

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