When Aitken stopped by his alma mater during offseason to get some reps at Sabol Field along Lancaster Avenue, he’d always tell Murphy how much he missed football. In Charlottesville, he caught some passes during the Will Barrow Memorial Flag Football tournament, but he wanted more. That’s why Murphy was not surprised when the player who’s athleticism is only matched by his toughness called him last winter and asked about his postgraduate options.
Aitken talked to Cincinnati and a couple other colleges, but there was a clear first choice. He might have an allegiance to the Linc, but it’s Villanova Stadium that feels like home. Aitken grew up less than a mile away. His cousin, Chris, played lacrosse for the Wildcats. Besides boasting one of the top teams in the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), there was also the school’s nationally ranked MBA program.
“It was pretty much all Villanova from the start to the finish,” Aitken said.
The transition has not been without its hurdles. The first day Aitken walked into the Talley Athletic center in mid-August, he wondered if his teammates knew he was a real person since all their meetings had been over Zoom. The first couple weeks of running routes “on air” felt awkward. Pagan offered critiques on seemingly every detail, including hand placement while catching a football.
“The training might be a little different, but at the end of the day it's just hard work,” Aitken said when asked to compare his experiences in Charlottesville and the Main Line. “Some days you feel great and some days you might feel sore, but you got to put your head down and work hard.”
Every day he feels a little more comfortable.
“What’s the best thing that you do well at the receiver position?” Pagan asked Aitken during one of their first meetings.
It is the same thing he did on the lacrosse field, Aitken explained. At 6-foot-2 and around 200 pounds, he was bigger than everybody else, so he knew how to use his body and create separation or shield people off.
“That's the same thing we're seeing here,” Pagan said. “When he's at the top of a route, he's able to use his body and his physicality to shield guys off and go attack the football.”
Aitken is listed exclusively as a wideout on Villanova’s roster, but that hasn’t stopped the team’s defensive coordinator from popping into Pagan’s office every once in a while with the same request: “Can I use him in a package on defense?”
Aitken even showed off his leg one day after practice with some encouragement from the team’s director of player personnel.
“He bombed a few,” Pagan said.
The Wildcats already have an all-conference punter. But when practices resume in 2021, Aitken will compete to start at wideout.
“You can tell he definitely critiques himself and holds himself to a high standard,” Pagan said. “He’s done a tremendous job and is very mature. He knows what it takes to win a national championship and is willing to put in the work.”