TUESDAY POLL: WHO YOU ROOT FOR, PINHEADS, BASKETBALL, AND LAST WEEK’S MVP

Last week I asked if you cheered for the other service academies. If your answer was yes, I also asked what you thought of those that don’t. The results are in, and about 17% of you think I’m a classless jerk, mostly because I root only for Navy. Eight voters thought I was a classless jerk regardless of my rooting preference. That was the poll choice reserved for Army and Air Force fans, “navyblue12,” BLOOTERS, and people who think Riley Skinner is better than Nate Davis. Gotta make sure everyone’s voice is heard, you know. Anyway, it was pretty even between those who root for everyone and those who root only for Navy, and Army is clearly preferred over Air Force (roffles). What, you guys don’t like Fisher telling us our new way to count to 10?

Moving on to this week, I’d like to talk a little basketball. I haven’t written much about the basketball team yet this year, partly because football keeps me busy and partly because I’m not sure I have anything worth reading. That doesn’t mean I’m not totally pumped about this team, though. The Mids are sitting at 7-2 after a big week, defeating two teams they lost to last year (UTSA and Penn) while putting up a heck of a fight against Virginia Tech on Sunday. After an inexplicable stinker against Towson to open the season, Navy rolled to a 7-game win streak. The best part about that winning streak was how the Mids were winning. Navy used to be very formulaic; if they won, either the team shot lights-out or Greg Sprink carried them to victory. This year, though, Billy Lange’s squad is getting it done any number of ways. They’ve won when they shot well. They’ve won when they shot terribly. They’ve won as a team. They’ve won with a player carrying the team on his back. They’ve won pretty, won ugly, in regulation and in overtime. They’re winning games they would have lost last year, and they’re still getting better.

Which brings me to this week’s question. It was a heck of a week for both the Navy football and basketball teams, highlighted by some outstanding individual performances. Out of all of them, who was last week’s MVP? The candidates:

  • Shun White: 148 rushing yards, plus 2 TDs (1 receiving). Went over 1,000 rushing yards for the year.
  • Kaleo Kina: Named Patriot League Player of the Week for the second consecutive week after averaging 25 points, 7 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and 1.3 steals in 3 games.
  • Kaipo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada: Ran for 43 yards and threw a TD pass vs. Army. More importantly, returned from a hamstring injury to run the offense to near perfection.
  • Ross Pospisil: Registered 12 tackles and a forced fumble in stuffing Army’s running game.
  • Adam Teague: Shot 62.5% from beyond the arc for the week and averaged nearly 15 points per game.
  • Nate Frazier: Registered 7 tackles, including 1.5 behind the line of scrimmage, anchoring Navy’s defensive line and holding the nation’s 11th-leading rusher to only 54 yards.
  • Eric Kettani: Ran for 125 yards and a TD, averaging 5.2 yards per carry.
  • Ram Vela: 6 tackles, a sack, and a 68-yard interception return for a touchdown.

The list is long. The candidates are worthy. Go forth and vote.

MIRACLE FAIL

It was going to take a miracle to avoid a reatch with Wake Forest in the EagleBank Bowl. Unfortunately, I think Navy football spent its miracle budget for the year on the Temple game. What we all hoped to avoid has become official: Navy will be taking on Wake Forest on December 20th at RFK Stadium. Yeah, it sucks, especially for the Mids. It’s lousy for Wake Forest too, but at least for them it’s a shot at redemption. Navy, on the other hand, is forced to prove themselves on a test they’ve already passed. College football just shouldn’t have rematches. Half the fun of bowl games is playing someone you otherwise wouldn’t see, something we’ve been fortunate enough to have the last 5 years.

Wait… 5 years? Man, that’s crazy, especially for those of you who have been Navy fans for a while. Six straight bowl games. When you were sitting & watching Georgia Tech hang 70 on us in 2001, could you have possibly imagined that such a string of success would be right around the corner? Hell no. Not at Navy, where hard luck was a way of life. But with the right coach and the right players, a phenomenon was born.

Actually, that’s only part of the story. Right coach and right players, but also the right fans. There’s a lot of message board bravado about what “we” need to focus on if “we” need to win, as if the poster was part of the team. It’s a little ridiculous… Except when it comes to bowl games. Bowl games are the one area where fans can have a very tangible impact on the fate of the football team. Chet promised the Houston Bowl that Navy fans would deliver when he campaigned for the Mids to get the game’s at-large berth in 2003. And we did, 20,000 strong. Each year, Chet makes the same assurances to bowl committees; and each year, Navy fans back up his words. When Chet goes to the bargaining table looking for a postseason home for the team, his best leverage is us. That’s why 6 wins gave Navy a spot in Washington this year, Houston next year, and San Diego the year after that.

Which brings me to my greatest concern about playing a rematch with Wake Forest. Hopefully, ticket sales won’t suffer for it. Chet set his target at 30K tickets, which is ambitious even for a game played in our own backyard. But why not set the bar that high? It’s basically a Navy home game, and we have no trouble bringing 30K to Annapolis, right? Well, we’ll see. Hopefully people will get past their disappointment with the rematch and realize that no matter who we’re playing, you’ll have one more tailgate, one more reunion with friends, and one more chance to see Navy football before the long, long offseason. For those of us that don’t live in the area anymore, this game is a chance to get back to Annapolis, too. For me, I’m excited to see Kaipo one last time after he missed so much of this year. I’m optimistic; I didn’t buy my tickets until yesterday, and my seats are terrible. So they must be selling pretty well, right??

Anyway, what’s done is done. I’m sure most of you are miffed at how we ended up with Wake Forest, but really, it was kind of inevitable. Not that you won’t look for someone to blame in all this:

The NCAA

It looked like N.C. State was a possibility at first. It would’ve been nice to get to play Tom O’Brien and the Wolfpack. But N.C. State only finished 6-6, while nine other ACC teams finished 7-5 or better. NCAA rules dictate that a conference must place winning teams in its affiliated bowl games before any 6-6 teams would be eligible. Ironically, that rule exists because of a stunt pulled by the ACC in 2002 to put 6-6 Wake Forest in the Seattle Bowl. It sucks now, but it’s designed to help teams like Navy by ensuring that at-large bids are available for us should the need arise.

The ACC

The ACC could have forced the Emerald Bowl or the Humanitarian Bowl to take Wake, right? I don’t know, maybe. But keeping your bowl partners from selecting the teams they want is a great way to end the business relationship between the conference and the bowl games.

Maryland

Maybe Maryland’s exam excuse was a sham, and they just didn’t want to play Navy. Or maybe it was legitimate. Either way, it doesn’t matter. They weren’t going to fall to the EagleBank Bowl in the first place if the Humanitarian Bowl wanted to pick them ahead of Wake Forest (which they did).

The EagleBank Bowl Committee

So why didn’t the bowl committee try to work an exchange with another bowl game and another conference? Well, who says they didn’t? But you have to find a partner willing to deal. Those other bowl games don’t want Wake Forest any more than the 8 ACC bowls that passed on selecting the Demon Deacons when they had the chance. Besides, in this economy, local bowl games are a plus. I doubt the Wake administration wants to go somewhere else, even if their message board fans would disagree.

Chet Gladchuk

LOL. Seriously?

Anyway, I’m going. I want to see one more game at RFK. I want to see some friends, hit up the tailgate, and generally have a good time. That stuff isn’t dependent on who we play. Hope to see you there.

RIGHT SAID FRED WOULD BE PROUD

What do you get when football and high fashion collide? The Army-Navy Game, naturally. Well, “high-fashion” might be a stretch. But as you have probably heard by now, Nike is using the Army-Navy Game to showcase the unveiling of its new “Enforcer” line of football uniforms. Both teams will come out sporting the new look, in uniforms apparently designed to honor the services they represent. Army will be wearing camouflage in one shape or another, while Navy will be wearing white jerseys with blue numbers, plus blue pants with a blood stripe (a la USMC) flanking either side. The stripe will be framed in gold. (You’ll have to take my word on this one).

I consider myself a traditionalist, as do many Navy fans. It’s kind of the nature of the school. And I can hear the wailing and gnashing of teeth now. DEATH BEFORE FOOTBALL UNIFORM ALTERATION! But hold on a second. Uniform stunts are a part of Army-Navy tradition, especially for Navy; from the throwbacks in 1999, to the blue helmets of 1993, to the orange helmets worn by receivers in 1962. Hell, Wayne Hardin like to do something different each year. There were the “Jolly Roger” skull & crossbones helmets, “BEAT” and “ARMY” written on the shoulders, and Chinese characters on the helmets to mess with Paul Dietzel’s “Chinese Bandits” defense, made famous when the Army coach was at LSU. And then there’s my personal favorite:

These things didn’t ruin the game or trample on the sanctity of the rivalry. Instead, they just became part of Army-Navy lore. Yeah, I know, it’s hard to get all misty-eyed for a Nike publicity stunt. But it’s fun for the players, and adds just a little zest to a game that has seen declining ratings. It isn’t the end of the world. I mean, we aren’t the ones wearing camouflage helmets (lol @ Army). Is that the opposite of the orange helmets? Will it look like a bunch of headless Cadets running around the football field?

So chill out! At least until we know that these things are absolutely heinous.

ARMY WEEK

Man, is it time for Army already? It doesn’t feel all that long ago that I was wondering what the heck I was going to write about Towson after spending all summer talking about the Alternative Service Option. Now here we are in December, rolling into the Game Of Games with a 7-4 record and making plans to head to RFK for yet another bowl game. Time flies when you’re having fun, I suppose. But if that’s the case, then August probably feels like a long, long time ago for West Point. After the emotional, controversy-filled offseason that saw the Alternative Service Option come and go, Army fans had to view the coming season as sweet relief. For once, there was cause for optimism on the banks of the Hudson. Yes, after a “defensive scrimmage” for a spring game that came after a double-secret spring practice that came after a double-secret “coaches’ retreat” meant to devise a new offensive scheme, word leaked that the option– the mighty, all-powerful, cure-for-what-ails-ya option– would be returning to Army.

Or so they thought, anyway. I’d like to tell a little story. Back in my midshipman glory days, some friends & I were sitting in the little slice of paradise known as deck 6-4 in Bancroft Hall and discussing high school football. One guy started telling us about his old coach. He told us about one game in particular, where his coach kept calling for the same play over and over again. After running it five times in a row, the coach called timeout. After gathering the team around him, the coach said, “OK, let get out there and run that play again. They’ll NEVER expect us to run in six times in a row!” That story more or less captures the essence of Army’s “option” offense. For the most part, the options end when the play is called in the huddle. When news broke on Tuesday that Army QB Chip Bowden suffered an ankle injury in practice, I wondered, “OH NO! NOW WHO WILL HAND THE BALL OFF TO COLLIN MOONEY???”

(Bowden, despite tweaking his ankle, is expected to start anyway.)

Mooney
Mooney

Indeed, the triple option at Army means offensive coordinator Tim Walsh deciding if he should call Mooney left, Mooney right, or Mooney up the middle. As predictable as the offense is, the fact that Mooney has been so productive this year is a real testament to his ability, and a credit to the line blocking for him. Before the season I mocked Army defensive coordinator John Mumford (deservedly so) for calling Mooney “probably better than any Navy fullback we’ve ever faced.” But to Mumford’s credit, Mooney has played one hell of a season. Another 54 yards, and he’ll have Army’s single-season rushing record. He’s 11th in the nation in rushing with over 1,200 yards despite everyone in the building knowing that he’s going to get the ball on almost every play.

This wasn’t Stan Brock’s design going into the season. Army started the year trying to run an actual option offense. It wasn’t Navy’s spread option; it actually resembled the wishbone derivatives run by Fisher DeBerry’s early Air Force teams. No matter what it was, it didn’t work. Quarterback play was a large part of the problem; not surprisingly, neither Bowden nor Carson Williams were very proficient in the offense after only one offseason running it. Bowden took over for Williams as the starter since, if neither guy is all that great running the offense, you might as well play the faster guy who might be able to break a long run here or there. But more than just the play of the quarterback, Army has had to make a pretty tough realization. It’s been a long-held belief by Army fans (and coaches too, judging by comments in recent years) that the Black Knights have pretty much the same talent level as Navy. The only thing they lacked, according to this theory, was the right scheme to fit that talent. Hence the preseason optimism; with Navy-like talent and a Navy-like scheme, maybe they would see Navy-like results. Unfortunately for those who drank the Kool-Aid, that hasn’t proven to be the case. Once Army started running an offense that looked a little like Navy’s, it was a lot easier to compare the talent between the two service academies. The results weren’t good for the Brave Ol’ Army Team. When it comes to overall team speed, they just don’t measure up.

The quarterbacks’ struggles take a lot of the option game off the table, and the lack of outside speed makes the perimeter rushing game less effective. So instead of trying to do something they couldn’t, Army’s coaches decided to focus on something they did well. That meant using strong offensive linemen and a bruising fullback to push the ball up the other team’s gut. It’s a role in which Mooney has flourished, and he almost single-handedly is responsible for Army’s 3 wins this season. That makes Nate Frazier the man of the hour for Navy’s defense. This is his Everest. Army is going to come right at him. Other than whatever tricks Stan Brock has up his sleeve, they can’t do much else. The last time this kind of a challenge was placed on Navy’s defensive line, Frazier, Nechak, and Tuani responded with a brilliant effort against Notre Dame. Hopefully they will do the same tomorrow.

Some Hawaiian guy.
Some Hawaiian guy.

For the Mids, there’s more uncertainty surrounding this Army-Navy game than there has been in years. The central issue for the Blue & Gold is who will start the game at quarterback. Ricky Dobbs started last week against Northern Illinois, and after some nervous mistakes on the first drive, he settled down to run the offense well enough to win. But according to Coach Niumat, Kaipo has been practicing all week and looking as good as he did back in the spring. But he hasn’t played in a month, and has only played one full game all year (Rutgers back in September). Do you go with the hot hand, or the seasoned veteran? Tony D’Amato went with Cap Rooney over Willie Beamen in the big playoff game, and that’s what I think Niumat will do–and should do– here. Most of you read Wagner’s blog too, and you probably are big fans of the weekly videos he puts out each Wednesday. In this week’s video, Wags feels that Navy should go with Dobbs. If this was any other game, I might entertain the thought. But don’t underestimate how big Army-Navy is. The last sophomore to start the Army-Navy game was none other than Kaipo himself in 2006. By his own admission, he was a nervous wreck and played a horrible game. This is the same guy who went into South Bend and actually waved his arms to get Notre Dame fans to make more noise, being so confident in his ability to pick up a first down. Kaipo is one cool customer, and even he struggled. And I’m sure nobody needs to be reminded of what happened in Charlie Weatherbie’s first Army-Navy game. Kaipo might be rusty, and who knows how healthy he is, but he’s the most experienced QB and most likely to keep his calm. I expect him to go as long his body can take it.

What he’ll be going against is a defense that has performed as well as any other against the Navy offense over the last few years. The first four Army-Navy games under Paul Johnson were characterized by the Navy offense running wild. In 2006, Kaipo had a rough game and the offense didn’t play as well. Last year Kaipo was fine, but despite the 38-3 score, all you heard on CBS was how well Army defended against the Mids. Navy fans were left wondering if Army found the magic formula to finally slow down Paul Johnson’s offense. Don’t worry, they haven’t. Army lined up with the same 4-3 look that Pitt and Notre Dame used this year.

Just like those two teams, Army focused on interfering with the playside tackle, freeing up their middle linebacker and allowing him to flow to the ball. I put two plays on this first clip here. On the first play, you can see the DE lined up outside the tackle and puching him away from the MLB, back towards the middle of the line. The defensive end can do this because the tackle is usually supposed to release inside of him on his way to the linebacker. One of the adjustments you’ll see the coaches make is to have the tackle release outside instead. It makes for a tougher read for the quarterback, but it keeps the tackle from getting caught in the pile. Just in case any of you think I’m full of crap when I tell you that defenses actively try to interfere with the tackle, watch the second play. Josh Meek releases outside of Army’s DE, but actually gets grabbed and pulled from behind to keep him from blocking the MLB.

Now, there are other adjustments you can make. What Coach Johnson did was run the double option, making the fullback a blocker and assigning him to the middle linebacker.

That wasn’t the only thing that Army was doing, though. The defense also did a good job of mixing in different reads to try to confuse Kaipo. Usually the defensive end was giving Kaipo a “keep” read when he turned to push the tackle towards the middle of the line. But sometimes, the DE faked going after the tackle, using his arms to push him instead of driving into him, then stepping upfield and into the quarterback’s path. It’s sort of like a pitcher with a good pickoff move to first base. This is called a mesh charge. The quarterback reads keep, but gets blown up in the backfield. It’s generally considered the toughest read for a QB to make in this offense, and it gave Kaipo fits at times:

When you get in the habit of reacting to one particular read, it can throw you off when the DE fakes that one read and does something else. Fortunately, Kaipo is quick to adjust and caught on to what Army was doing. The correct read on a mesh charge is to give to the fullback, and Kaipo made that read as the game wore on:

One other adjustment that PJ made to the mesh charge is similar to what we saw against Northern Illinois. Instead of optioning off of the DE, PJ put the tackle on him and called a designed handoff to the fullback. When the DE stepped upfield, he took himself out of the play. A great block by Reggie Campbell on the middle linebacker, and you have a nice gain:

These were good adjustments by Coach Johnson to keep the chains moving, but none of them were really designed to hit the home run. Go back through the video again and look at how aggressive Army was playing. The middle linebacker didn’t just flow to the ball, he really overpursued. Army’s secondary virtually disregarded the possibility of the pass, except in 3rd & long situations. These are usually the times when PJ unleashes the HAMMER OF THOR and calls play-action or a reverse that goes for 6. But he didn’t here. With huge defensive plays keeping Army out of the end zone, and huge special teams plays putting Navy into the end zone, he didn’t have to. Coach Johnson isn’t the kind of guy to tip his hand, especially with a team he’s going to face every year. If he can beat a team just by running simple stuff and winning field position, he will. That way, opposing coaches think their defensive scheme worked, and will try it again the next year. And that’s when you can unleash the mental Manhattan Project on them and blow them away.

Of course, none of this matters without execution, and that’s what Saturday’s game is going to come down to. Even if the strategy wasn’t the best, Army didn’t make it worse with bad execution. They played well, while at times the Mids did not. That said, it was a friggin’ five-touchdown victory. If Navy executes like they’re capable of, you’ll see more of the same. If we see more mistakes and inconsistency like in the Notre Dame game, it’ll be a lot closer. Rise to the challenge, and we’ll sing last.

Beat Army.

BEFORE I FORGET: NAVY 16, NORTHERN ILLINOIS 0

OK, so the NIU game was a week ago, and now it’s Army week. You’ve probably moved on from last Tuesday night’s win, focusing instead on things like Army and bowl games and whatnot. Well, not me. Not having written anything about the NIU game eats at my conscience like termites gnawing away at a dead tree. So before we let this game fade into <mike> bolivian </tyson>, let’s take one last look.

I wasn’t overcome with joy to see that ESPN moved the game to ESPN Classic, but whoever it was in Bristol that suggested the move is probably getting a lot of high-fives around the office. If you aren’t a Navy fan, that game was b-o-r-i-n-g, especially when compared to Ball State’s quest for perfection. But if you are a Navy fan– and why the hell else would you be subjecting yourself to this crummy blog– then few things were as beautiful as the Mids’ 16-0 shutout of the Huskies. It was the prototypical Navy football game, with long drives on offense to shorten the game and a bend-but-don’t-break defense that prevented the big play and tightened up when it had to. The shutout was Navy’s first since 2004, and came at a time when the defense could really use it.

Before the game I wrote that this was a good opportunity for Navy’s defense to develop some consistency. They haven’t been able to string together back-to-back solid performances since the Rutgers & Wake Forest games back in September. The defense played well against Notre Dame, but the team still came up short. After such a letdown, you get concerned with how the team will respond. Not this week. Ross Pospisil once again led the team in tackles against NIU; after recording 20 in last year’s game, he followed it up with 12 more this year. The defense gave up some yards here & there, but they improved as the game wore on thanks to some shrewd adjustments by Buddy Green.

One of the best moves Buddy made led to Emmett Merchant’s interception. Early in the game, NIU had been using a particular pass play with some success:

In the first play, NIU is lined up with trips to the left. The inside receiver runs a route to the flat. The two other receivers on that side of the formation run downfield. Ram Vela is the linebacker responsible for covering the flat, but he gets caught up defending the other two receivers. In essence, there are two defenders covering the receiver who ran the hook pattern, and nobody covering the flat. NIU completes the pass to the open receiver for a nice gain.

In the second play, we have a variation on the same theme. Instead of trips receivers, though, there are twin receivers and a tight end on one side of the formation. Slightly different formation, but NIU runs basically the same play out of it. The tight end runs to the flat, while the two wide receivers draw the linebacker (this time Jeff Deliz) downfield. Another wide open play, and another nice gain.

Both of those were in the first half. In the third quarter, NIU ran the exact same play as the first example; trips to the left, inside receiver running to the flat, with a buttonhook and a corner route to draw the linebacker away. Only this time, Buddy baited NIU’s quarterback. Deliz covered the buttonhook, giving the QB the same look he had on the first play. Probably thinking the same receiver would be open again, the QB threw the ball. But this time, Emmett Merchant jumped the route to the flat from his safety position and intercepted the pass.

A great adjustment by Buddy, and great execution by the Mids. The maturation of the defense is a sight to behold.

But even the first shutout in four years couldn’t make the defense the biggest story in this game. No, it’s all about the quarterbacks with you people, and all eyes were on Ricky Dobbs as he made his first start. And Ricky played pretty well. You’re probably thinking, “duh.” He had 124 yards and a touchdown! Of course he played well! But like we’ve said before, sometimes stats tell you less about how well you did, and more about what you did. That’s definitely the case here. Ricky and Eric Kettani combined for 44 of Navy’s 54 carries, and 216 of the Mids’ 262 rushing yards. With numbers like that, you might think that Ivin Jasper called a lot of midline option. You’d be right. You might also think that Ivin called so many midline plays in order to keep things conservative for his young quarterback. There, you’d be wrong. The midline was actually an adjustment by Ivin to what NIU’s defense was doing.

First, let’s look at a triple option play from early in the game. You’ll recall from previous game reviews the “cross charge,” a stunt where the linebacker takes the B-back while the defensive end takes the quarterback. Jarod Bryant struggled with that read. Northern Illinois did the same thing here, and to his credit, Ricky was able to read it and pitch the ball for a nice little 6-yard gain:

Now, take another look at the defensive end. He doesn’t actually attack the quarterback. Instead, he takes a really deep step upfield and waits for the quarterback to come to him. By doing this, he hopes to accomplish one of two things. The first would be to confuse the quarterback, causing him to hesitate and making it easier to tee off on him. The second would be to step in and bat down the pitch. This is the same defense that East Carolina used against the Mids back in the 2006 opener, and you may recall that they did so with a little bit of success. The Mids lost two fumbles that day when Brian Hampton’s pitches were swatted away by ECU defenders. PJ’s adjustment, as he explained it, was to “play the game in the phone booth.” That meant running between the tackles, and that meant a heavy dose of the midline.

Coach Jasper, seeing the same defense that ECU ran, made the same adjustment that PJ did back then.

By using the midline, you allow the DE to more or less take himself out of the play when he steps so deep into the backfield. As a fringe benefit, he also becomes an easy assignment for the tackle to block. The quarterback then options off of the DT instead. The playside A-back runs inside of the tackle and becomes a lead blocker for the quarterback. If the playside linebacker follows the A-back to the middle of the field, it means a nice gain for the quarterback (which you can see on the second play).

Ricky wasn’t perfect. But outside of the fumbles– which hopefully can just be attributed to jitters– he played a good game. Things certainly didn’t get worse with him in there, although it should be noted that Ricky was aided by a Northern Illinois defense that kept things pretty simple for him throughout the game. He’ll see something different from Army if he plays.

One thing from the game that I didn’t understand was the clock management at the end of the second quarter. The Mids got the ball on their own 13 yard line with about a minute and a half to play. At that point, if Coach Niumat didn’t want to put his first-time starter at quarterback in a position to give up a turnover deep in his own territory, I completely understand– especially when you’re already up 9-0. But three plays into the drive, the Mids were almost to the 40 yard line with :32 left on the clock. At that point I figured it might not be a bad idea to call timeout and take a couple of shots downfield to see if maybe we could set up Matt Harmon for a field goal. Navy did indeed call timeout. It was 2nd & 2 coming out of the TO; a perfect chance to throw deep. If it’s incomplete, it stops the clock, and you still have the opportunity to pick up the first down (which also stops the clock) running the ball on the next play. But that’s not what the Mids did; instead, they ran for the first down right away. OK, not what I would have done, but they still picked up the first down and were able to spike the ball to stop the clock. They still had enough time to throw a pass or two, right? That’s not what they did though; the next play was a handoff to Kettani, and Navy let the clock run out.

I don’t agree with not trying to score there. It was clear that possessions were at a premium in that game, so I felt that you had to make the most of the ones you got. Coach Niumat obviously felt differently, and I don’t mind deferring to his judgment. I’m sure that his decision was impacted in part by having already burned two timeouts on the first drive. But if you’re going to run out the clock, why call your last timeout? Why bother to spike the ball? Kind of confusing.

But that’s one small quibble in an otherwise outstanding game. Playing in a phone booth won’t get you many highlights, but it was the perfect adjustment in a game like this. It wasn’t the most spectacular game to watch, but a shutout coupled with long, grinding offensive drives is a perfect recipe for a Navy win. With the 6th consecutive winning season secured, it’s one less thing to be concerned about heading into the biggest game of the year.