LAFAYETTE - Louisiana head coach Rickey Bustle knows that Texas A&M's defensive unit isn't called the "Wrecking Crew" for nothing.
And nobody has to tell him that the Aggie offense, a question mark last year, should be improved with the return of 10 starters.
He knows what kind of challenge faces his Ragin' Cajun squad Saturday when he hits the field for the first time as a collegiate head coach.
"We've been working on Texas A&M all spring and summer, really," Bustle said. "But in the last few days we've really started concentrating and taking a good look at them."
The Cajun squad, which held its final scrimmage on Wednesday, began "game-week" work on Thursday in preparation for the Aug. 31 6 p.m. opener at A&M's Kyle Field.
"Our kids started looking at film Thursday," Bustle said Friday, "and we spent two entire scout periods working against A&M today. We'll do a lot more next week, but we've already spent a lot of time working against their special teams."
Bustle, who took over Louisiana's program in December, said that getting his team ready for the physical tasks of the game may be more important than A&M preparations - considering that the weather has been an albatross for his squad.
Friday's practice wasn't hampered directly by rain, but the practice fields got another soaking prior to practice. Before Friday, the squad had seven straight days of workouts either delayed, postponed or severely hampered by rain.
"We've got to improve in all areas," Bustle said, "and that's hard with as much work as we've missed. You miss a lot in the speed of the game with the weather we've had. You can't show that kind of speed indoors or when the fields are bad.
"I know our defense is quick and our receivers are quick, but you can't work with that indoors. We really need a good week of weather."
Saturday's situational work was held under sunshine and clear skies - an omen, maybe, for the final week of preparation.
Before that final week begins Monday, the Cajun staff will have a long day of film breakdown today, and developing a plan of attack against the A&M defense will take up much of that time.
"They're really excellent on defense," Bustle said. "Coach (R.C.) Slocum has already said he expects them to be even better defensively this year, and they were plenty good last year. The nose guard (Ty Warren) is a heck of a player. People were double and triple teaming him and he was still getting to the ball.
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