TUESDAY POLL: ACC FOOTBALL AND OTHER THINGS THAT OFFEND YOU

OK, things are getting straightened out a bit.

ATLANTIC DIVISION
School Conference Pct. Overall Pct.
Florida State 5-3 .625 8-3 .727
Boston College 4-3 .571 8-3 .727
Maryland 4-3 .571 7-4 .636
Clemson 4-4 .500 6-5 .545
Wake Forest 4-4 .500 6-5 .545
NC State 3-4 .429 5-6 .455
COASTAL DIVISION
School Conference Pct. Overall Pct.
Georgia Tech 5-3 .625 8-3 .727
Miami 4-3 .571 7-4 .636
Virginia Tech 4-3 .571 7-4 .636
North Carolina 3-4 .429 7-4 .636
Virginia 3-4 .429 5-6 .455
Duke 1-6 .143 4-7 .364

The goal here is to avoid Wake Forest and Boston College in the EagleBank Bowl. BC can do a lot to help that situation with a win over Maryland this weekend. The Eagles hold the tiebreaker over Florida State, so if both teams have 5-3 conference records, Boston College will advance to the ACC championship game. The winner of the championship game goes to the Orange Bowl, obviously. But the loser of the championship game can fall no lower than the Music City Bowl according to ACC rules. So with a win, BC will take themselves out of the running for Washington.

Wake Forest might be a problem. They’re sitting at 4-4 right now, and they will probably be one of several teams with that record. They’re a small school that doesn’t have the same traveling reputation of the others in the conference. If Charlotte doesn’t take them– and they won’t if UNC or NC State are available– then they could slide pretty far down the list.

Then again, only 8 teams qualify, then all this is moot. Clemson, Virginia, and NC State all have a shot at becoming bowl eligible this weekend, but none of them have a cakewalk. Clemson has to beat South Carolina, Virginia has to beat Virginia Tech, and NC State would need to beat Miami. If none of them win, we’ll face an at-large team. If more than one wins, that would give the EagleBank Bowl an alternative to Wake. If only one of them wins… We’ll see. I’m still holding out hope for Virginia.

Anyway, on to today’s poll question. Reef Points says that the term “Middies” is inappropriate, and that “Mids” should be used instead. Most of Navy’s regular broadcasters seem to have learned this, but given the noobishness of the broadcast team for tonight’s game I expect to hear “Middies” quite a bit. The poll question for this week is: do you care?

GAME WEEK: NORTHERN ILLINOIS

Tuesday night is not made for college football. Unless, of course, you’re the MAC, in which case any time is a good time as long as you’re on TV. Such is life when you’re battling for exposure. Tomorrow night’s game at Northern Illinois will be the Mids’ third road game at a MAC school in two years, with each of them being moved to a weeknight and broadcast on one of the ESPN channels. Originally this game was going to be shown on ESPN2, but with an unbeaten Ball State team taking on Western Michigan for the MAC West crown on the same night, Navy-NIU no longer receives top billing. Instead, our game will be shown on ESPN2 ESPN Classic. There are good things and bad things about this move.

CONS

  1. Less exposure for the program on a channel not as widely distributed.
  2. Horrible, horrible ESPN Classic production quality. Seriously, watch an Army game sometime. Laughable.
  3. No high definition.
  4. Most likely a JV team in the broadcast booth.
  5. Not what NAAA agreed to when it signed off on moving the game to a Tuesday night.

PROS

  1. No “Interactive Tuesday.”

ADVANTAGE: ESPN CLASSIC 

I’m trying to imagine the meeting up in Bristol when this idea was cooked up. “Hey guys! I know how to make our weekday games even better! Let’s add polls and message board posters!” It’s bad enough that the actual game being played is usually just background material while the broadcast team discusses the weekend’s big BCS-conference matchups or drag racing or a local eatery or how they want a playoff. Now we get all that plus insightful commentary like “BUCKNUTZ321: OMG TEH WOLVERINEZ R TEH SUXORZ ” and “REDRAYDER4LYFE: HAI GUYZ DO U THINK TEXAS TECH WOULD BEAT THE KANSAS CITY CHIEFS” scrolling across the top of the screen. Awesome. Hey, we all know why they do it. They have to find a way to increase ratings, and that means they have to appeal to the lowest common denominator. Even if it sucks eggs, they know we’ll still watch because it’s football! On a Tuesday! But that doesn’t mean we have to like it.

(And according to Wags, NAAA is not pleased)

But enough of the tangent, and on to the game.

Joe Novak took over as head coach of the Northern Illinois football team in 1996. It was a difficult time for the program; they hadn’t had a winning season since 1990, and they had just dropped out of the Big West conference to go independent for a year before rejoining the MAC. Things didn’t get any easier in Novak’s first three years, as the Huskies struggled to a 3-30 record in that span. But eventually he was able to get things turned around. NIU was 5-6 in Novak’s fourth year before starting a string of seven consecutive winning seasons, including a 10-win campaign in 2003 that saw victories over Maryland, Alabama, and Iowa State. 

That all ended last year. A string of bad injuries and bad luck made Joe Novak’s final season in Dekalb painful, as NIU limped to a 2-10 record (including a 35-24 loss at the hands of Navy). With Novak retiring, Northern Illinois began the process to find his replacement. They didn’t have to go far; the Huskies went to the other end of the state and hired Southern Illinois head coach Jerry Kill. Kill’s story parallels Novak’s in a lot of ways. Like Novak, Kill struggled through a couple of seasons of his own before also leading the Salukis to a 10-win season in 2003. That would be the first of three straight conference championships for SIU. In 2007, they won 12 games before falling to Delaware in the I-AA semifinals. Having turned Southern Illinois from a doormat to a playoff regular, Kill seemed like a good choice to pick up where Joe Novak left off.

At the end of year 1, there is no reason to change that opinion. Bouncing back from last year’s debacle, NIU is sitting at 6-5 and has a chance to clinch another winning season tomorrow night against Navy.

Larry English
Larry English

The team that the Mids will be taking on tomorrow night is a far cry from the beaten-down squad they took on last year. Perhaps the most staggering improvement has been on defense, where nine starters return from last year’s unit. Last year, NIU was 12th in the conference in rushing defense. This year, they are first. Last week the Huskies held the MAC’s top rushing offense, Kent State, to 127 rushing yards on 34 carries. They held Tennessee to a scant 69 yards on the ground and only 9 first downs. In 2007 the Huskies were 11th in the MAC in total defense. This year, they are first. Last year, they were 9th in the conference in scoring defense. This year, they are second, and in the top 20 nationally. Only two games removed from struggling against another MAC defense, one would be foolish to take NIU’s defense lightly– especially considering the caliber of offenses in the MAC West. The unit is led by defensive end Larry English, the 2007 MAC Most Valuable Player. English holds the school record for sacks with 31.5, and is also the country’s active career leader in that category. He has 8 this year despite playing most of the season with a broken hand. The linebackers are a veteran group, led by seniors Josh Allen and Tim McCarthy. Sophomore Alex Kube (sounds like “Cuba”) is the youngster of the group, but led the team with 15 tackles in Annapolis last year.

On the other side of the ball, NIU can be described as what Paul Johnson liked to call the “NCAA offense.” PJ described the NCAA Offense like so: “They run some two backs, a little one back, they will spread you out, and they will run some power. I think they want to try and be balanced. ” That’s NIU in a nutshell. The run comes first with the Huskies. They average a healthy 176 yards per game on the ground, led by a veteran offensive line that tips the scales at 294 pouds per man. Unlike last year, where Justin Anderson carried the ball 39 times against the Mids, this season’s edition of the NIU offense likes to spread their carries around; six NIU players have at least 30 carries on the season. Chandler Harnish, a big, mobile, redshirt freshman, starts at quarterback. He’s coming off of a tremendous performance last week against Kent State where he threw for 173 yards and ran for 117 more, with 4 total TDs. It was his second 100-yard rushing performance of the year, and he is second on the team in rushing. He would probably lead the team had he not missed three games due to injury. Instead, that distinction goes to another freshman, Me’co Brown. Built more like a Navy slotback than a traditional tailback, Brown has run for 503 yards this season while also serving as the team’s leading return man.

This is a good test for the Navy defense, and a good opportunity to develop some consistency. The Mids have played well in a few games, but have followed up some of their best performances with some real stinkers. Last week the defense was able to put together a good showing against a Notre Dame team that was determined to run the ball. Northern Illinois doesn’t have the raw talent of Notre Dame, but they are probably better coached and just as eager to run. Ross Pospisil had 20 tackles in last year’s game, but with NIU being a little more varied in their running scheme this year, I doubt anyone will match that total tomorrow night.

No matter how the defense plays, though, the only thing that anyone will be talking about on Wednesday is the play of Ricky Dobbs, who (like Jarod Bryant last year) gets his first real start against Northern Illinois. Coach Niumatalolo has been upbeat about Dobbs’ performance in practice this week: “He has had a really good week of practice. I have been really encouraged by the way he has practiced.” Considering how Coach Niumat spent last week talking about the mistakes Ricky made in practice, that’s a good thing. And maybe it isn’t really a surprise, either. Being named the starter is a tremendous responsibility, and sometimes knowing that causes a player to focus better. Either way, Ricky should do well if the team around him does its job. Unfortunately, that’s a pretty big “if” this year. It’s also natural to expect a few more passes this week to take advantage of what Ricky does best.

Usually by the 11th game of the season you expect to have a pretty good idea of how things are going to turn out. But with all the variables going into this game, anything is possible.

NOTRE DAME, CONTINUED

If anyone here wants to commission me so I can blog full-time, please drop me a note. Until then, you’re stuck with whatever I can churn out that fits with my schedule. I apologize that this is late, but the videos are kind of a pain. Most of you have probably already written your opinions of the game in stone, unfortunately. I hope I’m not too late!

Anyway, another year, another loss to Notre Dame. I don’t know about you, but to me it stings a little bit more this year. Yes, it was the first game after finally breaking through against the Irish, and yes, there was the furious comeback that fell tantalizingly short. But most of all, this game hurt because it was so winnable. I have watched a few Notre Dame games this season, and I thought the Irish are definitely better now than they were in 2007. After last week, though… Boy, I don’t know. For the first time I can recall, I just didn’t get the same feeling of mismatch that usually accompanies a Navy-Notre Dame game. Don’t get me wrong; there was a definite physical difference between the two teams, and it was obvious right from the coin toss. Yet it didn’t seem to me that Notre Dame was really able to take full advantage of it.

Well, that’s mostly true. There was one exception. Notre Dame’s defensive line was very disruptive and really played an excellent game. One play in particular that sticks out in my mind was Ricky Dobbs’ first play. It was a midline option. Ricky made the right read and kept the ball, but when he tried to run through the gap vacated by the DL that took the fullback, it had already been closed by a ND defender pushing his blocker into Ricky’s path. It was a war all afternoon for the Navy o-line, and the Irish certainly won their fair share of the battles. But interestingly enough, that wasn’t the case on the other side of the ball. Just like every other Notre Dame game, CBS showed the on-screen graphic that highlighted the weight difference between the Irish offensive line and the Navy defensive line. Unlike those other games, it was Navy’s defensive line that was getting the better of it, at least in the first half.

I can’t say enough good things about the way the defense performed on Saturday. Everyone and their mother knew that Notre Dame was going to run the ball. That has been their bread & butter against Navy historically; Christian Swezey’s research tells us that during the 43-game win streak, Notre Dame had an individual with at least 90 rushing yards in 35 of those games. Not only that, but with Jimmy Clausen throwing 4 interceptions the previous week against Boston College, there was no way Charlie Weis was going to put his young gunslinger in a position to fail again. Navy’s defensive line knew it too, and they played as if their manhood had been challenged. Jabaree Tuani, the smallest of the three, had the biggest game. The freshman registered 7 tackles (2 for a loss) and recovered a fumble to lead the unit. Tuani is starting to remind me of David Mahoney; different positions, obviously, but both players who worked their way into the starting lineup as freshmen because of their motors and knack for getting to the ball. Both are undersized talents that could have gone to a BCS program if they were 3 inches taller. Being undersized is not a problem that Nate Frazier generally faces, and the nose guard made 4 tackles, recovered a fumble of his own, and blew up Notre Dame’s attempt to run out of the “Wildcat” formation.

When Tuani, Frazier, and Nechak weren’t making plays themselves, they were occupying the Irish offensive line enough to keep them off of the linebackers. That unit had a whale of a day. Jeff Deliz might have had the best performance of his career, racking up 17 tackles while lined up primarily as an outside linebacker. Ross Pospisil and Clint Sovie combined for 19 tackles themselves, and Corey Johnson had a career day of his own. Navy’s point-guard-turned-pass-rusher put his crossover moves to good use, getting past Notre Dame’s tackles to help force two turnovers. Johnson’s first-quarter sack of Clausen caused a fumble that was recovered by Tuani, while a hit delivered in the second quarter while Clausen was throwing led to a Ketric Buffin interception. You can add Ketric to the parade of superlatives too, with two interceptions and a pass breakup in the end zone. Notre Dame didn’t have a pass play longer than 14 yards– a sign of good coverage and good tackling. It was a remarkable turnaround from the Temple game, and an encouraging sign; once the defense can do this consistently, they’ll be pretty good. Until then I guess we’ll just have to take the good with the bad.

It’s a shame that this week’s “good” feels like it went to waste. While the defense was holding Notre Dame to 3 of 10 on 3rd down conversions, they were being supported by an offense that went only 1 for 13 in the same category. Eventually Navy’s inability to sustain drives took its toll, with the Irish able to run the ball better in the second half against a worn-down defense. Jarod Bryant has more or less taken the blame for this performance among the majority of readers here– or commenters, anyway– and the coaches have announced that Ricky Dobbs will get his first career start against Northern Illinois on Tuesday. But before you go off and hail Ricky as the solution, you might want to get a better idea of the problem.

We’ll start on the perimeter. Take a look at the picture. Here we have the base spread formation. The defense is lined up more or less the same way that Pitt did; 4-man front, with the middle linebacker deep.

The play called was the triple option. You’ll notice that the corners are lined up more than 5 yards from the line of scrimmage. When they’re that deep (aka out of the count), the playside wide receiver’s responsibility is to block the corner straight up. The playside A-back is supposed to carry out a load block, first checking the middle linebacker before moving on to the safety. But that isn’t what happened here. Instead, both players go to block the safety, leaving the corner unblocked. He ends up stuffing the play. The first two diagrams show what was supposed to happen. The third shows what actually did happen.

Now let’s look at a slightly different situation. Below we have twins to the left. The play is again the triple option, run to the left.

Running the triple towards the receivers out of this formation is the same as in the base spread, except the outside wide receiver always blocks the corner lined up over him. The inside receiver and the playside A-back have the same responsibilities that they would in the spread. Here, the corner covering the inside receiver is lined up within 5 yards of the line of scrimmage. In this case, the wide receiver is responsible for blocking the safety. The playside A-back should arc block the corner (aka #3 in the count). But he doesn’t; he carries out the load block as if he was on a 2-count side. Once again the corner is left unblocked, and once again he blows up the play. (To add insult to injury, Bobby Doyle was called for a chop block, too. Low-low is not a chop block. The ref screwed up.)

We also saw a problem that has been plaguing the offense all year; the tackle being unable to get to the middle linebacker, leaving him free to spy on the quarterback.

Take a look at those three plays. These were the types of problems that Navy was facing against Notre Dame. Notice what they weren’t. Did Jarod Bryant miss reads here? No. He made the right read on each of these plays, although in real-time it might have appeared to you that the wrong man got the ball. Was Notre Dame putting 8 men in the box? No. Hell, they barely even had 7 men in the box with the middle linebacker lined up so deep. So would passing have helped to loosen up the defense? No.  Was Notre Dame stacking the box because they thought Jarod couldn’t pass? No, so there was nothing to loosen!

Now ask yourself this: how many of these problems will get fixed by changing the quarterback?

Look, I get it. You see the offense struggling, and you want to see corrective action. You don’t want to hear that it’s a matter of execution. Nobody is more visible in the offense than the quarterback, so you figure that the problems must start there. But sometimes, coaches actually tell it like it is. Jarod had issues– we’ll get to that in a second– but for the most part he put the ball where it was supposed to go. Ricky’s arm won’t fix this. Being an “exciting player” that “brings fans to their feet” and “moves the pile” won’t fix it either. Ricky Dobbs has all of the physical gifts one could hope for in a Navy quarterback, and he’s going to be a really, really good player for us. But that doesn’t mean he’s the answer to our troubles. If Navy’s offense plays well on Tuesday night, it will be because these problems were corrected.

Something else that won’t fix this is gadget plays. As Paul Johnson grows smaller in the rear view mirror, his legend grows larger. Apparently some people think that he ran two reverses or slotback passes per game. No, he didn’t. And when he did, it was when he noticed something in the defense, either in film study or during the course of the game, that convinced him that the play would work. You can’t just run a reverse whenever you want to and expect it to work. Besides, if you see that your offense is having trouble executing their bread & butter that they’ve practiced countless times almost every day for the last 4 months, would you really expect them to execute a trick play that they just installed this week? Sure, some trick plays, like reverses, get practiced every week too. But that’s a play that’s set up by running the triple option well, which is something that hasn’t happened much this year.

Which brings me to another point. This year, the offense has scored on the first drive of every game except Notre Dame. That’s a pretty strong testament to the preparation of the coaching staff. While being prepared is a great thing, some comments have started creeping in about the apparent lack of in-game adjustments. Some adjustments are obvious, while others are a little more subtle. But again, it all goes back to execution. In order to adjust to the way defenses are playing against the triple option, you first have to execute the triple option. You can’t adjust for blown assignments.

Even with the offense’s abyssmal performance, Coach Jasper was able to throw in a wrinkle or two. A couple weeks ago we talked about the cross charge, where the quarterback’s pitch key comes unblocked and takes the fullback. Notre Dame started using this in the first half:

It’s a read that Jarod has struggled with all year. When the quarterback sees the give key step upfield to play him instead of the fullback, his instinct is to give the ball. But when he does, the fullback is met by the pitch key, who was (correctly) left unblocked. It takes a lot of practice for an option quarterback to recognize what is happening beyond just the give key, and to make the right read. On a cross charge, you want to pitch the ball. The A-back will have wide open spaces. Ideally, you wouldn’t even have to adjust for this, since the quarterback would make the right read. But Jarod had a hard time with it. Fortunately, Coach Jasper had an adjustment ready, and the result was Cory Finnerty’s touchdown run.

Jasper’s adjustment was to change Jarod’s pitch key. He had the playside slotback block the linebacker that would ordinarily be #2 in the count. Mario Washington, the inside receiver in the twins formation, would block the safety’s inside-out pursuit (and do so rather effectively). Now Jarod would pitch off of the corner that was covering Mario.

With the cornerback lined up so far outside, it was an easy read for Jarod to make. The corner’s momentum towards the play in the middle of the field meant that he’d be out of position on the pitch. It was a great adjustment by Ivin Jasper, and well-executed by the team. Unfortunately for the Mids, good execution wasn’t the norm. Unlike the Pitt game where Scott McKillop was just that damn good, most of Navy’s problems against Notre Dame were home-grown. Against a defense the caliber of Notre Dame’s, it’s important to get your 3-4 yards a pop on every play. It only takes one blown play to stop a drive.

If there’s a silver lining in all this, it’s that maybe Notre Dame’s defensive success this year will lead them to line up the same way in 2009. There’s no one scheme that will stop this offense, but there are a few that can do the opposite. Until then, we’re back to hoping for better luck next year.

TUESDAY POLL: LOL @ YOU HOMERS, ACC WATCH, AND THE LESSER OF SEVERAL EVILS

Well, either none of you really care about Patriot League basketball or you guys are the most impossible homers on the planet. Most of you picked the good guys to win the conference. You might be rethinking that position after Towson stomped a mudhole in the Mids on Friday night. If you were hoping to think that Towson is really good as a way of easing the sting, that was crushed on Sunday as Niagara carried out a similar mudhole-stomping on the Tigers. The Mids have a lot of kinks to work out before Patriot League play begins.

Anyway, one more weekend down, one more chance for the ACC to screw everything up. More specifically, Wake Forest screwed everything up by losing to North Carolina State. A win would have given the Deacs a 5-2 record in the conference, making it pretty tough for them to fall to the EagleBank Bowl. Instead they’re 4-3 with only Boston College left on their league schedule. The Eagles did their part to avoid RFK Stadium by beating Florida State to get to 3-3. But now either Wake or BC is guaranteed to lose, meaning that one of them will be no better than 4-4. As the two teams most likely to be picked last by the ACC’s bowl games, that means hello, Washington. And hello, rematch.

ATLANTIC DIVISION
School Conference Pct. Overall Pct.
Maryland 4-2 .667 7-3 .700
Florida State 4-3 .571 7-3 .700
Wake Forest 4-3 .571 6-4 .600
Boston College 3-3 .500 7-3 .700
Clemson 3-4 .429 5-5 .500
NC State 2-4 .333 4-6 .400
COASTAL DIVISION
School Conference Pct. Overall Pct.
Miami 4-2 .667 7-3 .700
Georgia Tech 4-3 .571 7-3 .700
North Carolina 3-3 .500 7-3 .700
Virginia Tech 3-3 .500 6-4 .600
Virginia 3-3 .500 5-5 .500
Duke 1-5 .167 4-6 .400

Of course, that assumes that Virginia wins a game to become bowl eligible. They have Clemson and Virginia Tech left to play, so it’s no guarantee. If they don’t win, then the ACC won’t have 9 eligible teams. The EagleBank Bowl will then have to turn elsewhere. Originally it was reported that “elsewhere” meant the MAC, but that may not be the case. Reports from back in April that the MAC was the guaranteed replacement if the ACC did not field 9 eligible teams were premature. The EagleBank Bowl will instead pick from all at-large candidates. A smart move, really, since a MAC team will still be there if you really want one.

So what might be available? Notre Dame becoming bowl eligible shakes up the Big East a bit. Including the Irish, the Big East has 6 teams eligible. Rutgers will become team #7 with a win over Army this weekend. Louisville is also one win away, but needs to beat either Rutgers or West Virginia to get there. With only 6 Big East bowl tie-ins, someone should be left hanging.

The Big Ten has 7 bowl partners and 7 eligible schools. Illinois can become #8, which would leave someone hanging there, too. If a second team from the conference is selected for a BCS game, though, there won’t be anyone left out.

Conference USA probably won’t have anyone left over. The MAC might have one or two.

So the question for this week is the same as the question two weeks ago, only expanding beyond ACC choices. Who do you want to play in the EagleBank Bowl? I don’t even know how realistic some of these are, but who cares? Pick anyway.

AFTERMATH

All apologies to loyal Birddog readers today. Monday is when I’m supposed to post my OMG awesome game breakdown, but it’s going to be a little late this week. I usually prepare it on Sunday, but a small bit of family drama kept that from happening yesterday. No worries, though; after a diligent neighborhood sign-posting campaign, we did in fact find the owner of the big black German Shepherd that wandered into our backyard on Saturday afternoon. With this being a quasi-bye week, there shouldn’t be a problem with the weekly routine if I slide a day or two.

Maybe it’s for the best, anyway. It isn’t like any of you are interested in breaking down the game right now. No, the topic on everyone’s mind is quarterbacks, and it’d probably be a waste of time to address anything else. You guys wouldn’t pay any attention to it. So let’s look at some things that have been said so far:

“I would have to say its now time to give the kid the start. He not only brought the crowd to its feet but also gave the D some newfound spirit and life and led what may have been the most impressive comeback in many years.”

“I don’t have as much fear of mistakes when he is in… I know ones gut is not always correct, but I have to say that I now have a ‘Good, Dobbs is in.’ reaction when I see him play.”

“In college ball, where each player has a four year window and lineups change year to year, how much time do you spend trying to coach out potential before you go in another direction? Jarod is not a long term investment. 1 more year and he is done, gone. How fair is it to the rest of the program. He should be dominating by now. It’s not as if he is surounded by untalented players. He should be making better decisions. Fakes and Playaction should be more sharp. And under no circumstances should a defensive player crawl on hands and knees right in front of his eyes for five feet and record a sack without the option quarterback on the number 1 rushing offense in the country take one step to avoid the sack. It would not hurt at this point to give Ricky the ball and show us what he can do in a real game as the Navy QB.”

“Who looks more confident?
Who looks and runs stronger?
Whos pitches looked better?
Who looked in control?”

“I still don’t understand why Ricky can’t start and show us what he can do. …It comes down to who you think is the better QB. To me, it seems that Ricky has better instincts and is more “crisp.” Even though Jarod has been doing well, I would not second guess a Dobbs start if only to assess what we have. If he doesn’t do well against a defense with fresh legs and Jarod comes in in the second quarter and tears it up, I would consider the issue resolved and Jarod should get all the starts. It just seems that you are totally sold that Jarod is the better QB and 100% against giving Dobbs a start.”

Don’t bother sifting through the haiku thread. You won’t find those comments. Those things were said last year; swap out Jarod and Ricky with Kaipo and Jarod:

https://thebirddog.wordpress.com/2007/09/20/game-week-duke/

https://thebirddog.wordpress.com/2007/09/24/navy-outlasts-duke/

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

It sure does. And that’s just what was written here back in the infancy of this blog. It was the same elsewhere, and it had been that way since Kaipo took over for Brian Hampton the year before. “He gives the team a spark! He comes from a good high school program! He just knows how to win! He’s a better passer than Kaipo! What more do we need to see? If only Jarod would just get his chance.” Etcetera, etcetera. All the same platitudes you see now. People saw what happened when Jarod came in late in games, ran a package of plays specifically designed for him, and led the team on improbable comebacks. What happened in practice didn’t matter; Jarod was making it happen at game time. If you didn’t see it, then you were just being too loyal!

My point here is not that Jarod Bryant should be starting at quarterback instead of Ricky Dobbs. Indeed, the offense under Bryant this year has struggled far more than it ever did under Kaipo in ’06 and ’07, although people apparently thought that the offense was a real bucket of suck at the time. Hell, I was Jarod Bryant’s biggest critic then, just as I was earlier this year. Jarod struggled against Notre Dame too, especially in the counter option (which I’m sure the A-backs will tell you). There’s no doubt that Ricky has tools we’re all excited to see (don’t quote that out of context please), and if he starts, then great. I don’t have a problem with that, and frankly I had to bite my tongue to keep from calling for it after the Air Force game.

My problem isn’t with the idea that Ricky is a better option right now. My problem is with the arguments that people are using to support this conclusion. Maybe Ricky is the better choice than Jarod, maybe not. But some people are seeing what they want to see, which only serves to pile unreasonable expectations on Ricky. 

It’s hard, but try to separate yourself from the emotion of such a crazy game and look at what actually happened. Saying “if Ricky starts, we win the game” is, frankly, crap. Dobbs came in at the end of the third quarter against Notre Dame’s first-teamers and promptly started going three & out just like Jarod did. Once Notre Dame put in their backups, then Ricky was able to put a drive together. But even that wasn’t really a drive; it was a 4-yard run, a pass to Tyree, a 15 yard penalty, and a pitch to Shun. That’s it. And all against a second string defense playing prevent. That, plus the pass to Tyree on the next posession, does not erase what happened when Dobbs was facing the same conditions Jarod did. Just like we aren’t able to go an entire game against a competent defense running the special packages called for Jarod last year, the Mids aren’t going to win by throwing for 300 yards and running nothing but quarterback keepers with Ricky in there. You may not want to hear it, but practice matters. 

This isn’t meant to take anything away from Ricky. Actually, this is more of a preemptive defense. I say this in the hopes that there are some of you who aren’t already too far gone to be objective, and who might be able to reevaluate a few things. People are treating Ricky like he’s the savior of the offense, which is only going to set him up for failure. Putting Ricky in won’t make the tackles more experienced. It won’t make the perimeter blocking any better. And he won’t magically understand the offense better than he does in practice. When the “change the quarterback” panacea falls through, then what? Fire the coaches? You might think that’s ridiculous, but grumbling about the coaching staff has already begun. Bad game plans! Change the play calling! Yeah, OK.

I expect Ricky to start next Tuesday. Hopefully he’s awesome. If not, then brace for the meltdown.

GAME WEEK: NOTRE DAME

College football isn’t exactly the land of originality. When you think about it, you have the same storylines playing out each season. Some coaches are on the hot seat, while others are rebuilding. Some teams are lucky, while others are “fighting through adversity.” Some teams get labeled as contenders, while others are labeled as frauds. Last year’s losses become this year’s “revenge.” It’s all quite predictable, actually, which is probably why I find myself gravitating more and more to local coverage of each school rather than reading national newspapers and watching ESPN. More news, less cliche.

Anyway, back to this idea of revenge. I’ve never really understood the concept, at least as far as how it gets applied to college football upsets. Team A beats Team B, so Team B is out for revenge the next year? What, did Team A perpetrate some great injustice by actually trying to win? How dare they! Isn’t winning the whole point of all this hullabaloo? Herm Edwards told me that one time; something about how YOU PLAY TO WIN THE GAME. Herm is wise man, even if he isn’t the most successful coach in the NFL. So maybe if Navy didn’t just beat Notre Dame last year, but also tore down the goalposts, kicked the leprechaun in the face, and had Bill the Goat eat all the grass in one end zone and poop it out in the other… Maybe then vengeance would be called for. Until then, it’s just a team doing what it’s supposed to do. When an underdog wins, it isn’t revenge that the favorite seeks. It’s redemption. Indeed, tomorrow Notre Dame will be looking to redeem themselves after last year’s upset at the hands of Navy.

Navy fans, of course, are looking for an encore. I knew I would see the Mids beat Notre Dame eventually, but a year later it’s still a little surreal. Notre Dame week used to be all about the unending talk of the streak and 1963 and the streak and Roger Staubach and the streak. That’s gone now, but I still find myself annoyed. You know the scene in Apollo 13, where TV news crews want to set up equipment on the Lovells’ lawn? Marilyn Lovell’s reaction is basically, “oh, NOW they care.” That’s sort of Notre Dame week in a nutshell. Local TV crews show up to Navy practice, and national newspapers start writing about Navy and their “wishbone” offense and how unusual it is blah blah blah. Now that there’s no streak to talk about, this kind of stuff sticks out more. But hey, that’s one of the reasons why Navy plays Notre Dame; the national coverage it generates– however trite– is good for the program. So I guess I gotta suck it up.

Moving back to things that are predictable, the natural follow-on story the year after a team ends a long losing streak is how the underdog wants to prove that it wasn’t a fluke. Navy fans won’t want to hear it, but in a lot of ways it was a fluke. Think of the perfect storm of things that came together for a Navy win last year. This was the worst Notre Dame team in ages. Their offense had struggled to move the ball all year, and couldn’t decide on which quarterback to start. Their kicker couldn’t make anything longer than an extra point, stopping the Irish on otherwise reasonable chances to score on three drives. While Notre Dame’s defense was respectable, Navy had its best offensive line in decades and a quarterback that graded out at 97%; he literally was almost perfect. But even that wasn’t enough; the Mids had to score a defensive touchdown, too. And even all of that was only good enough to get the game into overtime. Now, this doesn’t mean that Navy was undeserving, or that they weren’t the better team. It’s just that you need to respect everything that went into that win. The result of the game wasn’t a fluke, but the circumstances that made that result possible were clearly out of the ordinary.

The question, then, is how much those circumstances have changed this year, and it appears to be quite a bit. Notre Dame is a better team than they were in 2007. Despite being shut out last week against Boston College, the Irish offense is still gaining 375 yards per game. That’s more than 130 ypg better than their 119th-ranked offense in 2007. A big reason for the improvement is the development of quarterback Jimmy Clausen. The oft-mocked golden boy of Notre Dame’s 2006 recruiting class struggled in his freshman campaign, splitting time with Evan Sharpley (the starter vs. Navy last year). This year, however, he is clearly a more competent player. Clausen threw for 347 yards against Stanford and 383 against then-ranked North Carolina in a close 29-24 loss. Clausen already has four games with 3 or more passing touchdowns, including the 4OT loss to Pitt two weeks ago. Helping his cause are a pair of emerging young wide receivers, Golden Tate and Michael Floyd, who combine for 10 catches and 160 yards per game. Now, does Notre Dame’s schedule have anything to do with their improvement? Absolutely, at least statistically. But you’d be foolish to dismiss their progress as nothing more than favorable scheduling, especially since the Mids haven’t forced Notre Dame to punt since the last election year– even with the terrible Irish offense in 2007.

On the Navy side, all eyes are on the quarterbacks. Senior Jarod Bryant will be getting the start, having sufficiently recovered from the shoulder injury he suffered against SMU. Bryant’s start is not without controversy, as sophomore Ricky Dobbs has directed the Navy offense to victories against SMU and Temple. But no matter who Coach Niumatalolo chose to start, that guy would have some pretty big shoes to fill. Kaipo’s near-perfect game against Notre Dame last year was the key ingredient in Navy’s victory. This year, Navy’s offense will be under even more pressure to keep pace. The coaches believe that Bryant, who Niumat said had a “winning grade” against Pitt and was on his way to a great game against SMU, has the best shot at replicating something close to Kaipo’s performance. No pressure! Then again, quarterback might not be the biggest position change for Navy.

Last year, one of the more celebrated game-planning wrinkles that Paul Johnson incorporated was the use of the tight formation against Notre Dame. It was easy to see the formation, but not everyone understood what exactly the Mids were doing differently out of it. We’ve talked a lot this year about the role of the tackles on triple option plays. On most plays, the tackle tries to run inside of the QB’s give key and block a middle linebacker (Notre Dame lined up with a 5-man front) to keep him from inside-out pursuit. The wide receiver and the A-back block the corner and safety, with each player’s assignment depending on how deep the cornerback lines up. In the tight formation against Notre Dame last year, Paul Johnson changed those blocking assignments:

I apologize if the arrows get confusing, but you can see how different the blocking was. The tackle and the wide receiver basically trade assignments. The wide receiver blocks the linebacker. The tackle releases outside the QB’s read and runs all the way downfield to block the run support safety. The twist in the scheme helped the Mids get to the outside and allowed Reggie Campbell and Shun White combine for 118 yards. Of course, with Jon Tenuta taking over the defense, it’s very possible that Notre Dame will line up differently against Navy this time around. But with the tackles figuring so prominently in Paul Johnson’s game plan last year, one wonders if Ivin Jasper will be able to make similar adjustments given the inconsistency at the position this year. But that’s why they play the game.

It’s weird having the sense that Notre Dame is just a game like any other now. It isn’t, of course; but it’s a lot closer to it with that abominable losing streak no longer hanging over the program. This year the media circus is concentrating less on the streak and more on Charlie Weis assuming playcalling duties. That, and what his fate might be if he loses to Navy again. Hopefully that adds a little pressure to the Domers this year. Because, like always against Notre Dame, Navy can use whatever help it can get.