
Having too much depth is a good problem for any football coach to have. Perhaps no member of Virginia Tech's coaching staff is victim of this issue to the extent Bryan Stinespring is.
The Hokies' tight ends coach can't say enough about his talented trio — particularly his senior.
"Ryan Malleck has been fantastic; not good, but fantastic," Stinespring said. "He's become a major leader for us."
Malleck's productive sophomore season gave way to a rotator cuff tear suffered just before the 2013 season. The Point Pleasant, New Jersey, native's return in 2014 was hindered by a nagging ankle injury by much of the season's middle stages but still produced career bests in all three major receiving categories (24 rec. 195 yds. 2 TD).
"(Malleck) does everything that you can ask a tight end to do," Stinespring said. "He can block in tight, block from the line of scrimmage, get out in space, get involved in protection, make plays in the passing game.. Other than selling popcorn, I don't know what else he can do for us. He's played exceptionally well.
"I'm proud of him."
The contributions of the redshirt senior have often been overshadowed by the dominance of Bucky Hodges (45 rec. 526 yds. 6 TD).
Record-setting receiving numbers are just the tip of the iceberg for Hodges, however, suggests Stinespring. In the perpetual quest for greater expansion, the Hokies have new plans to get their star as involved as possible.
"We had to challenge him," Stinespring said. "There's a lot that's encompassing with (Hodges) being in different spots. He needs to watch more film on his own."
The objective for the redshirt sophomore is to be aware of what every position on the field is doing, rather than simply focusing on the one he's playing on any given down.
Stinespring insists that the challenge is within Hodges' reach.
"A play could be run where he's playing outside but he needs to come back and be aware of what the other position tight end would've been doing that same play," Stinespring said. "He has to learn through his actions and visually. He has to take the ownership of it. He needs to see the plays through different positions. He may line up at all three spots but he can't rep them all at the same time.
"He's handled it well. It's exciting for him and keeps him motivated to continue learning and be a viable part. It's not an easy venture."
Stinespring noted that Hodges' versatility is similar to that of former Hokies tight ends Andre Smith and Greg Boone, but it's still "not even close."
"Andre Smith and Greg Boone – we played them at some extended positions," Stinespring said. "We could line up tight or spread them out. To this magnitude though, no."
Despite the wide range of accomplishments and ability, Hodges still has things that need improving.
"He had an outstanding year last year but there were some plays he left on the field," Stinespring said. "We want him to be able to recognize things and play faster. There's times where you have to play exceptionally fast, but you also need to know when you have to have some patience to set up routes.
"You only do it by doing it over and over again. There's a fine line between when you run with speed and athletic ability and use patience."
The prolific 2014 campaigns of Malleck and Hodges came in lieu of oft-forgotten Kalvin Cline.
"He's going to pick back up where he left off as a true freshman, just a little bigger and a little stronger," Stinespring said of the redshirt sophomore.
After setting the bar for productivity by Tech freshman tight ends, one which was raised by Hodges, Cline succumbed to a knee injury in the 2013 Sun Bowl. Before doing so, the Boca Raton, Florida, native accrued 321 receiving yards and two touchdowns on 26 receptions in just his second season of organized football.
The ailment, however, limited Cline in the following spring and slowed him thereafter. After appearing on just 58 plays in 2014, over the course of just two games, Cline was sidelined for good and recently granted a medical redshirt.
"Kalvin has come back. His legs are back underneath him," Stinespring said. "Early on he was very sluggish in the first couple days but it quickly came back to him. It's been awhile since he's really played so to get that going, today was his best day. He's been a little banged up but he's healthy. He's getting his timing back and his wheels back underneath him."

Comments
So we could have 3 or 4 TE's on the field and none of them on the o-line, what a concept...
Does Darius Redman count?
He's the sneaky goal line weapon. Go 3TE set, Line him up as an eligible receiver with his hand on the ground and you basically have 6 OL and 2 TE with the option to roll him off and pass.
Redman would be the fourth QB. Hodges wide, Kline wide, then line up Redman and Malleck with the O line.
Bill Belichick, is that you?
(obligatory)
I thought we always had 7 or 8 TEs on the field
It is just remarkable to me, the difference in how Stiney sounds as a position coach vs OC.
So many times he would say things as OC, and you'd just grimace and think he was talking completely out of his rear-end.
Glad he's still with us, and just extremely impressed with his ability to coach the TE position. Malleck was a fairly proven commodity, and not the best measuring stick, but seeing Kline & Hodges be as effective as they are as green TE's is proof that he knows what he is doing here.
Hodges to the NFL is a no-brainer, but I think Malleck will be playing Sundays as well, and if Kline picks up where he left off, he stands a great chance as well.
That's a hell of a coaching resume.
Stiney, like Newsome has a ceiling. Newsome's ceiling is Div 3 ball. Stiney's ceiling is Div 1 position coach.
TEU!
He was a good OL coach as well. We made a mistake (obviously) moving Stiney off OL when we hired Newsome. At that point, Newsome had only coached OL for one or two seasons at JMU. He had just as much experience as a TE coach, we should have put Newsome there and left Stiney on OL.
So many stories to read! Damnit TKP I have work to do!
Take more bathroom breaks.
even with all of joe's improvements, I think my laptop, not my phone, is the best way to view this site. And hauling the lappy to the men's room should get some odd looks...
Buy a Microsoft Surface.
"Just gonna work on some spreadsheets while I'm doing my business. "
You get credit for being an overachiever and get the best site layout. Twofer.
Haha... you said "twofer."
I love all this Malleck talk, but part of me isn't buying it hook, line, and sinker as the kid has had some serious injury trouble in the recent past. That, and Bucky is a fucking animal.
I am so confused right now. I thought we already had a bunch of QB's.
#Malleck4QB
Still don't and never will trust BS. Great initials!
Well thank heavens you're not a trusted Frank Beamer advisor.
I get that Stiney had issues as OC. But you can't deny the recruiting/position coaching ability. Dude basically taught Kalvin Cline how to play football.
Get over the past and enjoy life. The world is a beautiful place.
Who do we have coming up behind Hodges, Malleck and Cline? Any promising TE prospects in the hopper?
Burke as long as he stays at TE will be good
Not really. It is our smallest area right now. I am hoping that we are actually looking at a couple new TE's to come in. Redman (Sr.) moved to OT. Malleck (Sr?). Kline (Redshirt Sophomore). Hodges (Redshirt Sophomore) Burke (Fr?)
This is concerning, considering Lefty seems to place an added emphasis on the position in his scheme.
Very concerning as after next year (2016) they will pretty much all be gone.
That would give us Kline as a senior and whoever comes up behind him. So we're not in dire straights yet, but this isn't a position I want to flirt with disaster at. You need at least two, optimally three legit contributors beyond just the extra O lineman type of guys.
I think this is going to pay dividends for us, actually.
We will be missing Malleck, Cline, and Hodges sooner than later. But with the emphasis on the TE position, I'm betting we'll see a bunch of TE putting up big numbers, get very involved in the offense, and, possibly, get drafted (some more likely than others).
Seeing that success at the TE position, I'm sure we'll be able to pick up at least a recruiticorn or two at the position, and we'll be well-stocked moving forward.
This is definitely my hope.
My fear is that the improved performance by the TEs doesn't translate immediately in recruiting, we see a drop-off in performance at the position after Malleck and Hodges leave, and their contributions are seen more as their own abilities as players, rather than an increased focus on the position in our new system, leaving us without any discernible advantage in recruiting and lacking talent in a fundamental spot in Lefty's scheme.
We have Chris Cunningham coming in the summer as well. Not sure if he will stay at TE or move to DE though.
Lawson and Durkin...?
Exactly my thoughts. Those 2 along with some o-linemen and we'll reverse the process started in 2005.
I could see Durkin if he doesn't become the starting QB. He has too much athletic ability not to see the field at some position and has TE size already
Read this tread title again, made me chuckle. Stiney got some tught end talent....