OHIO STATE 31, NAVY 27

For a school so small, Navy is no stranger to big crowds and big games. Bowls, Army-Navy, and games against Notre Dame are annual events on the Navy schedule, as is the occasional contest against teams like Maryland, Stanford, and Pitt. Still, there are big crowds, and there are big crowds. Games at Ohio Stadium are most certainly the latter. Navy probably hasn’t played in front of a crowd as big as the 105,000 that showed up for Saturday’s game since the 1926 Army-Navy game, but if the Mids had felt any stage fright, they didn’t show it. Navy went toe-to-toe with #6 Ohio State on Saturday, but fell short, 31-27.

Half of me wants to feel giddy after seeing the Mids take the #6 team in the country down to the wire. Conventional wisdom said that Navy would have to play a perfect game to beat Ohio State, and maybe that’s still true. But if you were told before the game that Navy would be -2 in turnovers, would you think that they’d have a shot to tie the game with a little more than two minutes left? If you were told that Ohio State’s average starting field position for the game would be their own 42-yard line, would you think that Navy’s defense would have a chance? Ohio State made their fair share of mistakes as well– dropped passes, Jim Tressel’s Charlie Weatherbie moment, Pryor’s interception– but there was more to the closeness of the game than that. Navy belonged on that field, and they played like it.

On the other hand, the other half of me would like to remind you that it was, in fact, a loss. You might recall that Air Force took Tennessee to the brink in 2006 before falling, 31-30. You might also recall that Air Force stunk that year, finishing 4-8 and losing to both San Diego State (3-9) and UNLV (2-10). Now, I certainly don’t expect a 4-win season, but it just serves to demonstrate that there’s only so much you can take from one game. It was a long offseason, and a lot of energy was focused on preparing for this game. Now that it’s over, there’s a long season ahead. It will be very difficult to match the focus and intensity of the preparation that went into that first game.

Oh, but what a first game it was. It started out somewhat forebodingly, as what appeared to be a fairly obvous block in the back went uncalled and led to an Ohio State kickoff return all the way to the Navy 49. Navy’s defense spent spring and fall practice emphasizing the importance of getting off the field on third down, but the ensuing drive included conversions on 3rd & 8 and 3rd & 10 on the way to the game’s first touchdown. But the Mids answered with a touchdown of their own, driving 80 yards on 15 plays. It would be Navy’s only points of the half, with their remaining drives resulting in two punts and a fumble. Ohio State, on the other hand, was able to capitalize on good field position, and took a 20-7 lead into the break. The second half didn’t start out any better, as a rookie mistake from Gee Gee Greene and a dropped pitch by Marcus Curry forced the Mids to punt from the shadow of their own goal post. The Buckeyes had good field position after the punt, but self-destructed with penalties and punted themselves, again putting Navy on their own 1-yard line. This time the Mids responded, and they spent the next eight and a half minutes going 99 yards and scoring on a Ricky Dobbs pass to Marcus Curry.

Unfortunately, Navy’s next two posessions resulted in turnovers. The first was a tough fumble by Mario Washington as he was just fighting to keep posession as he went down. Ohio State was able to turn that into a touchdown and a 29-14 lead. The second turnover was an interception. The Buckeyes took posession and drove all the way to the Navy 14, and could have kicked a field goal to go up by three scores and put the game out of reach. For reasons unexplained, Jim Tressel did not elect to do so, and it cost him. After stopping Ohio State on 4th & 2, Ricky Dobbs connected with Marcus Curry, who ran past a gambling Ohio State DB and took the ball 85 yards for a touchdown. Then it was Ohio State’s turn to turn the ball over; Emmett Merchant picked off Terrelle Pryor and rambled down to the Ohio State 33. Three plays later, Ricky Dobbs trotted into the end zone, and the Mids were a two-point conversion away from tying the game. But Dobbs’ pass was intercepted and returned for two points the other way, and after a failed onside kick attempt, Ohio State ran out the clock.

If you hadn’t watched the game, maybe you’d think that Ohio State just called a vanilla game, hoping to avoid tipping their hand before their “real” opener this week against USC. That wasn’t the case. I wrote last week that I thought Tressel would keep the ball on the ground, hoping to avoid taking chances through the air in a game they should have (on paper) won easily. Boy, was I wrong. Ohio State came out throwing early and often, and with some success. Well, at least until Terrelle Pryor’s interception gave Navy a chance to tie the game, anyway. When the Buckeyes did elect to run the ball, Navy’s defense more than held their ground. It wasn’t until the second half, when they started running outside with the option, that Ohio State started to see any real success in the running game. Navy was able to put pressure on Pryor in the pash rush as well, but this is the one area where Ohio State’s physical superiority played a big factor. Usually Coach Green doesn’t like to blitz too much early in the game in order to keep from giving the offense a chance to adjust. He came after Pryor quite a bit on Saturday, though. Pryor was so friggin’ huge that he was able to shed off the blitzing linebackers and get the pass off. Without such a monster at quarterback, this might have been a much different game.

But schools like Ohio State can recruit monsters, which is how they got to be Ohio State in the first place. On to the video.

We’ll start with the number one question going into the game: the nose guard position. How would Jordan Stephens and Chase Burge do filling in for Nate Frazier? In a word, great.

You can see that the nose guards didn’t just absorb blocks; they made plays. If this is what we can expect every week, than this will be a very good defense indeed.

The nose guards weren’t the only playmakers on the defensive line:

I particularly like Nechak’s play, coming from five yards behind the line of scrimmage to tackle Terrelle Pryor from behind. While Ohio State had some holes to fill on the offensive line, they’re still Ohio State. The defensive line performed about as well as we could have hoped.

And then, of course, there was the offense. It appeared that the Ohio State game plan revolved around stopping the fullback. In doing so, they actually made it easier to run up the middle; of Navy’s 186 rushing yards, 153 came from the quarterback and the fullbacks. There are a couple of reasons for this. One thing Ohio State tried to do was bring the linebackers up to fill the A-gaps. You’d think that this would be a problem, but in reality the opposite is true. The fullback gets to the line of scrimmage so quickly in this offense that he’ll run right by the linebacker. That also means that once the fullback hits the line, he has a free path to the secondary. That’s exactly what happened on this next play; the guard actually whiffed on the block, but Alex Teich was already gone by the time the LB knew what happened:

Ohio State usually runs a 4-3 defense, but against the Mids they ran more of a 3-4 look, especially in the first half. They brought a linebacker up to the line of scrimmage on one side, and stood a defensive end in a 2-point stance on the other side. They liked to blitz them both, and it worked a couple times. The blitz on the backside caused Ricky’s fumble, for example. There is also the first play of this next video. Here, Ricky avoids the rush, but is brought down when the DT recovers from his cut block to make the play. On Navy’s first touchdown,  Ohio State did the exact same thing, only this time, the tackle missed his block. Missing that block is actually what allowed Ricky to get lose up the middle; the DT was so committed to the fullback that Ricky ran right behind him.

When Ohio State lined up more in their traditional 4-3, they had their middle linebacker jump at the fullback’s first move towards the line of scrimmage. This made the fullback trap very effective; the LB would aim for one gap, but the FB cut back and hit another gap. It also set up Ricky’s second TD run. This wasn’t a midline option; this was just the usual short yardage play where the fullback acts as the lead blocker for the QB. But the MLB committed to the fullback, and the safety was following the tail motion slotback. There was nobody left to tackle Ricky as he marched up the middle.

A couple other tidbits…

Here’s the fine line between success and failure. Ricky had a pass batted down at the line of scrimmage, but it wasn’t his fault. The tackle is supposed to cut his man to the ground to open a passing lane. Matt Molloy couldn’t do it the first time, but came through on his second try:

Kaipo was harshly criticized for throwing an interception on the same play in the 2007 Rutgers game, but it wasn’t his fault then, either.

We talked a little about how some option blocking schemes set up various pass patterns, and we could see that on Saturday. Here we have the triple option run to the weak side of the trips formation. We saw Georgia Tech run this play against Georgia with success, and it worked here too. Gary Myers blocked (angrily) the safety spying on Bobby Doyle, and the corner followed him before adjusting to make the tackle. On the very next play, Coach Jasper called play action, with Myers looking like he’s going to block the safety again, but instead continuing on his route:

It was incomplete, but it’s good to see how the gears turn.

There’s only so much you can take from one game. Nevertheless, there were a lot of good first impressions. The offensive line certainly wasn’t overwhelmed. Blake Carter and Ross Pospisil tackled very well, as did the team in general. The passing game was all that we hoped it would be; 3rd & long is no longer a death sentence. Perhaps most importantly, the defense responded after the first quarter to hold Ohio State to 3/12 on third down conversions, including 0/5 in the second half. There is a lot to build on here. And build they must. We get annoyed by the constant predictions of Navy’s demise year after year. Air Force is going to overtake Navy, they say. It’s games like this that will change that perception, but only if Navy goes on to a good season. Win, and this game becomes evidence that Navy is, in fact, a good football team. Lose, and Saturday’s effort falls into the dustbin of countless past “fluke” games in college football history.

Programming note: Believe it or not, I haven’t been to a home football game since the stadium was renovated. Bowl games, away games, spring games, and lacrosse games, yes. Home football, no. That is changing this week, as I’m headed up tomorrow. However, I don’t know what my schedule is going to be like, so don’t freak out if Louisiana Tech posts are kind of lacking this week. The world probably needs a break from my crap anyway.

Oh, and one more thing… I know I said I didn’t like the whole “don’t boo Navy” thing, but even I thought it was cool for both teams to run onto the field together.

GAME WEEK: OHIO STATE

I don’t know if I’m ready for football to start. Sure, the offseason can be a dismal time for the unimaginative blogger; it’s a bit of a struggle find something interesting write about in that vast expanse between actual, you know, games. But at least during the offseason I have the time to think of these things at my own leisure. Sadly (for me), that isn’t so once the season begins. Now there’s all kinds of stuff to write about, but I can’t take three lazy, glorious weeks to write it. You people are so demanding. There isn’t even a bye week this season until the end of November! Friggin’ Hawaii road games… Hopefully my performance at the paying job so far this year has been stellar, because the next four months are going to be spent averaging things right back down to mediocre. Time, tide, formation, and Ohio State wait for no one. It’s football season again.

Continue reading “GAME WEEK: OHIO STATE”

PASSING THOUGHTS

It’s been a few days now since the Nate Frazier news dropped. The team is moving on, as is Nate, although his first plan appears to have been derailed. There really isn’t all that much else to say on the subject, but it just feels like there should be more. Where’s the analysis? What’s the impact? The truth is that we’ll never really know. The one thing we do know is that whoever steps in at nose guard– whether it’s Chase Burge, Jordan Stephens, someone else, or most likely a combination of the three– is not only getting a tremendous opportunity, but is also going to be stuck with hearing “if Nate was here” from fans all season (see: Johnson, Paul). That’s unfortunate, even if it sort of comes with the territory. It’s hard enough to replace a player as good as Nate. It’s almost impossible to measure up to the mythical image of Nate that people are inevitably going to develop (if they haven’t already).

Continue reading “PASSING THOUGHTS”

CRAP

Bill Wagner is reporting that starting nose guard and beastmaster Nate Frazier has been dismissed from the team. This is bad in so many ways. Everyone knows that the key to a good 3-4 defense is having that talented nose guard that can cover two gaps and draw a double-team, keeping offensive linemen occupied and allowing the linebackers to move to the ball. Nate really grew into that role last year, and a big part of the optimism people had about the defense this year came from the anticipation that he would continue that development and be even more dominating. So much for that.

As far as the big picture goes, losing Nate puts more pressure on the offense. Just as the offense carried the defense in 2007, the defense was expected to do the same for the offense this year, with that unit breaking in new starters at almost every position. Losing what is arguably your defense’s best player makes that task a bit more difficult.

The #2 NG on the depth chart as of now is junior Chase Burge (6-4, 270).

BEST ROAD GAME?

If you could pick one Navy road game to attend this year, which would it be? Assume that you get to spend as long as a week in the area. And no, Annapolis doesn’t count if you live in Timbuktu of something. Seriously though, have you looked at the possibilities? You have BCS matchups with Ohio State and Pitt, the traditional game against Notre Dame, Dallas, Houston, and friggin’ Hawaii. The potential for entertainment is off the charts. So weigh the criteria however you’d like; competition, destination, quality of stadium nachos, whatever. If you had to pick one, where would you go?

*THUMBS UP* YOU LIKE THIS

If you fear the internet as the first stop on an evolutionary train of technology that can only end with Skynet and the destruction of humanity, you might not be aware of this… Those of you who have embraced the internet and all of its wonders, however, probably discovered at some point over the weekend that Navy football is now officially represented on Facebook. I’m not talking about the Navy Athletics Facebook page that’s been around for a little while now, or some fan page dedicated to the Mids; I mean an official Navy football page, complete with some video clips from practice and status updates from coaches. Before you know it, Buddy Green will be asking you to join him in Mafia Wars and you’ll be taking a “What member of the Navy coaching staff are you” quiz.

Like everything else on the internet, this will be pretty cool up until the point when the wrong people get a hold of it and ruin it for everyone else. Can you imagine if this had been around the last couple of years? And what it’ll turn into?

 

Bill Wagner wrote: Navy defeated Army today, 38-3. The 35-point margin of victory is tied for third largest in series history…

 

 

Paul Johnson wrote: Man I’m awesome.

 

GoMids Posters wrote: WHAT A TERRIBLE SHOWING BY THE OFFENSE. ARMY HAS US FIGURED OUT. PJ WAS TOO CONSERVATIVE. LOUD NOISES.

 

 

Paul Johnson wrote: WTF. We won by 5 touchdowns! I’m done with these people. Someone hit me up with a job offer.

 

 

 

Buzz wrote: Hi coach, ever try a chili steak?

 

Paul Johnson wrote: OMG

 

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: Georgia Tech has hired Naval Academy head coach Paul Johnson…

 

GoMids Posters wrote: THAT’S IT, WE’RE DONE. TIME TO BANDWAGON ON SOME TOP 25 TEAM BECAUSE WE’LL NEVER PLAY WITH THE BIG BOYS.

 

 

Ken Niumatalolo wrote: Hai guys.

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: Navy defeated #16 Wake Forest today, 24-17, for their second win in as many weeks against a BCS-conference opponent.

 

 

Ken Niumatalolo wrote: Man I’m awesome.

 

 

GoMids Posters wrote: BUT IVIN JASPER SHOWS NO CREATIVITY ON OFFENSE. WE WON’T WIN IF HE DOESN’T GET THE BALL TO THE SLOTS MORE. WHERE ARE THE PLAYMAKERS.

 

 

Ken Niumatalolo wrote: Dag nabbit.

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: WTF

 

 

Shun White wrote: I got it, coach.

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: After finishing with 1092 yards, Shun White became the first slotback to lead the Navy team in rushing…

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: Man I’m awesome.

 

 

GoMids Posters wrote: WHY IS THE BALL GOING TO SHUN SO MUCH. JASPER HAS NO CREATIVITY. WE’LL NEVER WIN THIS WAY.

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: WTF

 

 

Ken Niumatalolo wrote: Dag nabbit.

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: Navy finished another successful season, with 8 wins, a bowl game, the Commander-In-Chief’s Trophy, and an unprecedented fourth consecutive rushing title.

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: Man I’m awesome.

 

 

GoMids Posters wrote: JASPER HAS NO CREATIVITY. WE NEED TO PASS MORE. WE’LL NEVER WIN THIS WAY.

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: WTF

 

 

Ricky Dobbs wrote: Hey Coach! Think I can hit that seagull on the roof of 8th Wing?

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: Holy @#$%!

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: In a conversation I had with him this afternoon, offensive coordinator Ivin Jasper expressed his intention to throw the ball more often in 2009…

 

 

GoMids Posters wrote: FINALLY THE COACHES DO WHAT WE WANT. WE’RE SO AWESOME.

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: *rolls eyes*

 

 

Bill Wagner wrote: Navy finished another successful campaign in 2009, once again winning the CIC Trophy and a trip to the Texas Bowl. While the offense didn’t win the rushing title thanks to the renewed emphasis on passing, it was still as effective as ever…

 

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: Man I’m awesome.

 

 

GoMids Posters wrote: I CAN’T BELIEVE WE DIDN’T WIN THE RUSHING TITLE. NO EXCUSE. TEAMS HAVE FIGURED US OUT. THIS WOULD NEVER HAPPEN UNDER PAUL JOHNSON. I POOPED A HAMMER.

 

Ivin Jasper wrote: I hate you all.

 

 

 

Ken Niumatalolo wrote: Son of a biscuit.

 

Anyway, I don’t think that the new Facebook page is THAT big of a deal. What I really find interesting is how this contrasts with the Air Force Lack Of Information Proclamation issued last month. To me, the Facebook page is sort of emblematic of the apparent difference in philosophy between the two athletic departments when it comes to accessibility and dealing with the media. One is clamping down, while the other is constantly seeking new ways to get additional exposure. This isn’t a criticism of what Air Force is doing; it’s just an observation. But with newspapers in turmoil across the country, and sports pages being among the hardest hit, you’d think that this would be the time to open the doors a bit.

THE BIRDDOG HALL OF AWESOME: JAROD BRYANT

Jarod Bryant’s was a long and strange college football career. Having been named Alabama’s Mr. Football in high school, fans saddled him with ridiculous expectations as a plebe, hailed him as the solution to all the team’s problems when he was on the bench, then blamed him for all the team’s problems when he was on the field. All the while, Jarod just kept trying to find ways to help the team win, whether as a quarterback, slotback, placekick holder, or whatever. It’s a quality that led to him being named team captain senior year, and hopefully it’s how he’ll be remembered in the long run.

With the occasional turmoil the offense saw in 2008, it would be easy to forget the fantastic job that Jarod did in relief of Kaipo on more than one occasion in 2007. He ran for 139 yards against Northern Illinois, sparked a comeback to force overtime against Ball State, went 8-11 passing against Delaware, and led touchdown drives on four of six possessions against North Texas. At the top of the heap, though, was Jarod’s performance against Duke on a hot September afternoon in Annapolis. Stepping in with the team trailing by 11 in the fourth quarter, Navy’s closer led a 17-play field goal drive, caught a touchdown pass from slotback Bobby Doyle, then scored on the ensuing two-point conversion to tie the game. Duke took over with 3:49 remaining, but their drive ended when Ketric Buffin made an interception inside the Navy 20. Buffin was pushed out of bounds at the 26, where the offense took over with only 38 seconds left. What followed was a 35-yard scamper to glory that can really only be appreciated in slow motion, with appropriate musical accompaniment.

Jarod ran out of bounds at the Duke 39. The big gain allowed Coach Johnson to run the ball to run down the clock and set up the game-winning field goal, a given when your kicker is a cruel, heartless cyborg like Joey Bullen.

There’s lots of greatness to be had on this play. There’s the expert setup of the draw, the 360 move to escape one tackle, the ankle-melting jukes to escape two others, the splendid use of downfield blocking, and the situational awareness to get out of bounds. But it all pales in comparison to the singular awesomeness of finding the time to adjust your helmet in the middle of that bedlam. Now that’s multi-tasking, and it earns Jarod a spot in the Hall of Awesome.

BRAINDRIZZLE

I’ve been brainstorming for ideas, trying to come up with something at least a little bit interesting to write about before practice news starts coming out. Unfortunately, it’s been more of a braindrizzle than a brainstorm. I have to regurgitate something to keep you hatchlings fed, though, so here you go. None of these things are really worth their own individual posts, but together they make three things that aren’t worth individual posts. Now that’s value, and I’m all about value.

— Boy, that escalated quickly. I mean, that really got out of hand fast. I am referring, of course, to that Georgia-Georgia Tech post from a few weeks ago. It’s funny… I write stuff like that all year about Navy, and you never hear about it outside of our modest little group. Post one thing about Georgia Tech, though, and it explodes all over the internet. Next thing you know, Tech fans love me, Georgia fans think i’m a stoopid liar, they all post about it here, and chbags kills someone with a trident. Chaos! But I think it’s safe to revisit the subject now. The only Tech fans still wasting their precious time reading this gong show of a blog are the guys who were already regulars here. Now that the tide has gone back out to sea and it’s just us again, there are a few things I wanted to talk about.

It’s fun getting a little added exposure to the world at large, I guess, but it’s not without its problems. Most of you guys “get it” with regard to the things I say,  or at least you attempt to read and understand my point before railing against it (or agreeing with it, for that matter). Not so when dealing with the internet at large. It’s just the nature of the beast.  If you scanned other blogs and message boards that linked to that post, you saw people saying things like, “OMG THIS GUY SAYZ U CANT DEFEND PAUL JOHNSON LOL,” both from people who agreed and disagreed with that premise. Except that isn’t what I said at all. The post was supposed to be about how coaches had defended the wishbone, and why those specific defenses don’t work against the spread option. Obviously Navy and Georgia Tech aren’t scoring 60 points per game, so teams do stop them to some extent.

But wait… Didn’t I say, “There’s no one defensive scheme that will shut down this offense?” Yes, I did. Don’t misunderstand that, though. You can say the same thing about any offense.  Any offensive coach that knows what he’s doing can look at any defense and recognize how to attack it within the framework of his scheme. Let me put it this way… When Ohio State only scores 3 against USC or 6 against Penn State, does anyone say that those teams “figured out” Ohio State’s offense? Of course not. They’ll make some other generic observations about talent or speed or not being focused or whatever. But LSU holding Georgia Tech to 3 points? None of those platitudes will do. Instead, it’s OH NOES THE RIDDLE OF THE OFFENSE IS SOLVED. This is because people continue to believe that the spread option isn’t a “real” offense; it’s a “gimmick” offense. And if you believe that, then you think you just need to figure out the corresponding gimmick on defense, and that’ll be the end of it. It just isn’t true.

This offense has won bowl games, conference titles, and national championships for 25 years, setting record after record along the way. If there was a magic defense to shut it down, it would have been discovered by now. Of course you can defend against it, but not through some crazy scheme.

–Then you must stop it by playing assignment defense, right? Well, sort of. This topic reminds me of some of my favorite plays, where some safety is tasked with covering the pitch man, and is so focused on his assignment that he’s oblivious to the fullback tearing right by him.

I think most people are confused about what assignment defense means, and what assignment defense is supposed to accomplish. As was pointed out on Smart Football, “assignment defense”

gets thrown around by announcers a lot, with the implication being that all you have to do is “assign” one guy to the dive back, one to the quarterback, and one to the pitch back.

If the people who subscribe to this idea would stop to think about it for a second, they’d feel kind of dumb. Eleven guys on the field, but it only takes three to stop a triple option play? That must be the easiest play to stop ever! Obviously, that’s not the case. You see, offenses have these guys called “blockers” that tend to get in the way of defenders trying to make a tackle. It’s unfair, I know, but I don’t make the rules. As soon as one of these blockers gets in the way of someone chasing his assignment, that concept of assignment defense sort of goes out the window. If it was that simple to stop, I don’t think the option would have become a staple of college offenses for half a century. Nevertheless, people still think this way. You don’t hear about “assignment defense” only from television broadcasts and the collective brilliance of message board analysts, though; coaches talk about it too. But when coaches talk assignment defense, it means something completely different. They aren’t talking about having three defenders cover three potential ballcarriers. When coaches talk assignment defense, they’re talking about all 11 defenders.

Think about how defense is usually played. A guy either drops into the called pass coverage, or fills his running lane until he can diagnose what the offense is doing. At that point, he runs like a burning squirrel to the ball. But you can’t do that against the option. You can’t read where the offense is going to go with the ball because there’s nothing to read; the offense doesn’t even know where they’re going with the ball coming out of the huddle. The only thing you accomplish by anticipating is to guarantee that the ball won’t go where you jumped. That’s the whole point of the option, right? So instead of reading & reacting, players have to almost ignore the ball, and simply carry out their single assignment on every play. That is why you’ll sometimes hear about defensive coaches practicing without a ball the week before playing Navy; making a stop on one play does you no good if it leaves you open to the boomshakalaka on the next play. Imagine how hard this is for a player. Take the backside defensive end, for example. Here you have a guy who sees play after play going the other way whenever he sees the slotback in front of him going in motion. Navy keeps getting first downs. He gets frustrated, thinking, “they gave me a scholarship because I could make plays! I need to do something!” So he stops covering his gap when he sees motion, and starts cheating towards the middle to take the fullback and get involved with the play. Right about then, Coach Jasper will call a counter option, that guy will be trapped, and the quarterback runs right by him for 30 yards. That’s what they mean by discipline, which I don’t think gets conveyed very well on TV broadcasts. Even the guy on the opposite side of the field from the play needs to focus on his assignment, because the moment he does otherwise, the offense will adjust to him.

Well, crud. I guess the secret’s out now! Not exactly. Assignment defense isn’t any more of a magic option-stopping elixir as anything else. The offense will still get their 3-4 yards if they execute perfectly on every down. But how many offenses execute perfectly on every down? That’s the key here. The point of assignment defense isn’t to shut the option down; it’s just to prevent giving up the big play. In mistaking the spread option for the wishbone, people tend to assume that it’s also a 3-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust offense. But Georgia Tech led the country in plays of 20+ yards last year. For all the talk of New-Mexico-esque 8-minute megadrives, Navy has been far more likely to score in less than three minutes. This is a big-play offense. The more big plays you can pull off, the fewer plays it takes to score. And the fewer plays you need to score, the fewer opportunities you have to make a mistake. That’s what defending this offense is all about; preventing the big play, and forcing the offense to make a mistake. It can be something as simple as a 4-yard play turning into a 1-yard play. How you try to force those mistakes, and how the offensive coaches adjust, is where the chess match starts.

Of course, this doesn’t even scratch the surface of what assignment defense means to the passing game, something we expect to see utilized more this year. But that’s a topic for a later post.

HOLY CRAP ACTUAL NEWS. Media day means that Bill Wagner awakens from his summer slumber covering sailing, and returns to his blog to nurture us with the golden nectar of information. Already, he is revealing that Navy’s uniforms will be receiving what in auto industry terms would be described as a mid-cycle refresh. The lacrosse team is unimpressed. Possible throwbacks for the Western Kentucky game are a great idea, both for the whole tradition thing, and for the money that’ll be made when those jerseys are auctioned off.

Wags is also reporting that Ricky won’t be seeing any contact this fall. After going through three quarterbacks last year, I don’t think the coaches are eager to repeat the experience. I don’t think this is that big of a deal. However, I eagerly anticipate the first time Ricky screws up, which some yahoo will undoubtedly blame on him not getting hit enough in August. CAN’T WAIT.

THE BIRDDOG HALL OF AWESOME: JASON MONTS

2004 is a year that Navy fans won’t forget anytime soon. The team went 10-2, proved that Navy football was here to stay by repeating as CIC Trophy winners, and finished ranked #24 in both polls. The campaign was capped off with a convincing 34-19 win over a solid New Mexico team at the Emerald Bowl in San Francisco. It was a great game in a great city to wrap up a great season. The win was clinched when the Mids ate up almost the entire 4th quarter with a scoring drive that would last for an NCAA-record 14 minutes and 26 seconds, ending with a Geoff Blumenfeld field goal. Navy fans still talk about “The Drive” as the perfect example of just how soul-crushing this offense can be. What we don’t talk about nearly as much is the play that made that drive possible.

New Mexico had put together a drive of their own and faced 4th and goal from the Navy 1. Kicking a field goal when you’re down by 12 still leaves you needing two scores, so Lobos head coach Rocky Long didn’t hesitate to go for it. Running back D. D. Cox took a handoff and ran to the right, only to be met by a gaggle of Navy’s defensive stars. Cornerback (and game defensive MVP) Vaughn Kelley took him high. Linebacker Bobby McLarin grabbed his legs. Josh Smith came running in all the way from the other side of the formation to get to the ball, and Jeremy McGown stepped up from his free safety position. The referee was knocked to the ground, but when he stood up, he spotted the ball one foot short of the goal line. Navy had held, thanks to the collective effort of some of the season’s most celebrated players. But those guys weren’t alone. Cox was strung out to the sideline, unable to make a cut upfield towards the end zone. And that was thanks to the awesomeness of Jason Monts.

Monts wasn’t the most heralded player on the team, and you won’t find his play reflected on the stat sheet. If there was a stat for being badass, though, this definitely would qualify. When Cox took the handoff, all 6’7″ and 340 pounds of New Mexico tackle Terrance Pennington pulled around the tight end to clear a path to the end zone. Monts met him head on. And despite giving up 6 inches and 120 pounds to the future draft pick, it was Monts that got leverage and moved Pennington backwards. With his lead blocker being pushed back into him, Cox was forced to bounce outside and run toward the sideline, never getting the chance to turn the corner.

We have here a relatively unknown player, refusing to fail, making a play through sheer determination that he probably shouldn’t have been able to make. It wasn’t the most glorious of jobs, but it was his job nevertheless, and he did his part to lead his team to victory. In one play, Jason Monts embodied everything we love about Navy football. And that’s why he gets the nod for the Hall of Awesome.

THIS BLOG NEEDS SOME MORE WANT-TO.