Get used to seeing Sutton Smith The 6-foot, 220-pound lineman might not have the ideal frame to play defensive end in the NFL, but he’s only a sophomore and should continue to terrorize MAC backfields for the next two years.He entered the game second in the nation in tackles for loss (22) and third in sacks (10.5), so his six tackles behind the line of scrimmage and 2.5sacks against WMU weren’t completely surprising, but impressive nonetheless.We had every blocking scheme in America to try to base him, to wham him, to cut him off,” WMU coach Tim Lester said of Smith.“We tried to change our cadence, and the one thing about him, he’s really good at picking up cadence.If you watch him get off the ball, he did couple stunt moves that he timed up cadence really well.” “He has really strong hands, that’s one thing I’ll give him.His up-and-under, you can get a hand on him, but his hand movement when he chops you is powerful, you can’t just grab him and be done.“I thought we got better as the night went on with our protection.We knew where he was and we had someone chipping him all day, which I didn’t think allowed him to wreak havoc in the backfield.He did on a couple run plays, but I thought our pass (protection) was pretty good on him.