Sunday, September 27, 2009

Smoke & Mirrors

The pragmatist says, “LSU is 4-0 and 2-0 in the conference. I’m good with it”

The realist says, “LSU has looked OK thus far and is fortunate to be where they are. The season could go anywhere from here.”

The optimist says, “LSU is ranked #4 in the country and has the potential to be a very good team.”

The pessimist says, “LSU is #4 in the country this week?! Obviously the voters haven’t seen us play. It’s all downhill from here!”

Thus four people can see the exact same team yet draw different conclusions after four weeks.

Throw into the mix LSU’s statistical numbers (CLICK HERE) and it is fair to walk away scratching your head. With all the bad numbers, how is LSU 4-0?

*The Tigers are +7 in the turnover department. LSU already has 7 INT’s this season after only 8 all of last year. The offense, while not terribly productive, has only turned the ball over three times this season.

*LSU’s passing efficiency defense is ranked 10th in the nation. Thus far, the defense has made plays when needed. Look no further than the last two weeks. Two goal line stands late in each game are successes to build on.

*Jefferson has been efficient if not spectacular. Look at his numbers broken down here. Notice his second half numbers and his proficiency on third down and 6 yards or less and 7 yards or more.  With any sort of running game Jefferson can be very effective.

*The Tigers have three non offensive TD’s this season, two this week. It may not be pretty, but LSU is finding a way to win.

*LSU’s schedule has presented a few decent challenges thus far, but no marquee games. LSU’s four opponents are now 8-8. Compare that with Auburn’s and Alabama’s opponents who are 5-9 respectively.

Saturday’s game

LSU’s offense is terrible. Let me clarify that, LSU’s offensive line is terrible.

There is no other way to put it. The Tiger’s offense could only muster 263 total yards of offense and 16 points against the 44th ranked defense in the country. MSU turned the ball over FOUR times yet was in a position to win the game with about a minute left. LSU ran the ball 30 times for 31 total yards. Now included in that stat is 54 negative yards from sacks and bad snaps in the kicking game. But State is ranked 88th in the country in rushing defense. I couldn’t tell you the last time LSU ran the ball for fewer yards. MSU ran 86 offensive plays to LSU’s 59. The defense wore down in the second half as the grossly ineffective offense mustered a mere 85 yards after Lafell’s TD catch very early in the third quarter. The Tigers were a putrid 2 of 13 on third down conversions.

While LSU’s special teams cost the Tigers points with a missed FG, missed XP and a botched punt, Chad Jones saved the day with a 93 yard punt return. A great example of the old adage, ‘its not about the X’s & O’s, its about the Jimmys and Joes’

The defense played decent. Peterson had a pick 6 and the rest of the unit forced three other turnovers. But giving up that 50 yard TD pass was inexcusable. The Tigers are not potent enough on offense to give up cheap TD’s and get into a shootout.  The goal line stand was a thing of beauty.  No one can question LSU's toughness.

At this point, I think LSU is an average team that will go 4-4 down the stretch…if they are lucky.

I think this latest game has exposed some serious issues in year 5 of the Les Miles regime.

*It is clear that the 2009 team is much less talented than the 2005-2007 versions.

*A huge part of that goes to recruiting. While Miles can be forgiven for a small 2005 class finalized only after Saban’s post Christmas departure, the 2006 class was all Miles. Looking at that class, by my count 14 of the 26 players recruited either never made it to campus, were booted off the team, left school or transferred. The core of the “4 star” players in that class never saw the field. The 2007 is a little better, but attrition has taken a toll. By my count 9 players in that class are no longer at LSU.

*On a positive note, the 2008 and 2009 classes have had almost ZERO attrition. Nearly everyone is in school and working to get playing time. It remains to be seen how these classes work out, we won’t know for another two to three years. But two or three consecutive subpar recruiting classes can create an ugly bubble in a coach’s resume.

*The offensive and defensive lines are mediocre. Miles and crew either have done a poor job of evaluating talent or a poor job of developing players. Again, this could be a function of the recruiting. Nevertheless, the offensive line is yet to gel. Working with a young QB can’t help in getting the right blocking calls implemented.

*Questions have to be asked about the offensive staff and the play calling. Mad Hatter, where have you gone?  Russell Shepard is averaging almost 7 yards a carry. Why aren’t we using him more? Are we going to burn an entire year of eligibility having him play 3 or 4 plays a game? Should Holliday give way to Shepard? Shepard has Holliday’s speed and quickness with size. Let’s run him on the bubble screens, WR option plays and slot routes. He’s a guy that can create big plays for the offense. Can Jefferson check to new plays? What are we doing to attack these 8 and 9 man fronts Jefferson is seeing?

*Is LSU a middle of the road SEC program now? Are we looking at more 8 win seasons with the occasional 9 or 10 win year interspersed? Is it unrealistic to expect more of this program? From 2003 to 2007, LSU went 56-10. Are those days gone for good with Les running the shop?

I know the coaches have much more at stake than I do. The cumulative coaching salaries at LSU exceed $4 million. But the two year trend thus far is NOT encouraging. With games left against Tulane and La. Tech, I am confident LSU will make a bowl game. But hasn’t LSU risen above such mediocre goals?

October 3rd’s game versus Georgia will NOT make or break this season or Miles’ career. You will probably here a lot of blather about such ideas. I suggest you ignore it. But this IS a yardstick game. LSU and Georgia are similarly situated programs at this point. Both are playing second fiddle at the moment to juggernauts in their respective divisions. Both programs are trying to rebuild and make it back to a BCS bowl.

If LSU can avoid turnovers, play solid defense and be sound in the kicking game, the Tigers have an EXCELLENT shot at winning this game. Georgia’s defense is giving up almost 30 points a game and the Dawgs are -9 in the turnover department. Cox has thrown at least one INT in every game this year and Georgia has fumbled 7 times. The key will be whether LSU can capitalize on Georgia’s mistakes. Hopefully Miles reaches under that hat and pulls out a few tricks. The Advocated quoted Miles saying, “we can be a very, very good football team.” We shall see.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Photos from LSU v. UL Laffy & other Stuff

Sports Illustrated LSU photos

ESPN's Gameday Final

Chris Low's thoughts on the SEC

You thought an LSU game was expensive

Who is LSU?

Statistically, LSU has the worst offense in the conference. You knew it was bad, but not this bad. The Tigers are only churning out 325 yards a game. EVEN VANDERBILT IS GAINING MORE YARDS PER GAME!!! Compare that with two years ago when LSU was averaging 439 yards a game. What’s the problem?

1. The offensive line is not very good. Cleary this is NOT a power running football team. The holes have not been there. The longest run this season was 21 yards by Charles Scott. We are one quarter of the way through the season and Scott has ZERO TD’s.

2. Jordan Jefferson has a LONG way to go to become an effective SEC QB. The call went out last week to see the deep passing game. It doesn’t exist. From a purely ascetic point of view, Jefferson throws and UGLY ball. That quail is wobbling all over the place. From an execution stand point, he doesn’t put enough air under the ball on deep passes to let the receivers run under it. His timing is off as well; he waits too long many times to throw deep passes. The game plan specifically called for a number of deep routes and he couldn’t deliver.

3. Jefferson’s shortcomings are not debilitating to the offense per se, but the offensive line has got to begin to gel. If LSU is to run a ball control offense focused on running and short to intermediate passes, the O-line must get better at run blocking.

4. Let me throw some numbers at you. LSU ranks 43rd in the country in yards per rushing attempt. The Tigers rank 80th in yards per passing attempt. Contrast that with Alabama which ranks 12th and 16th respectively.

5. Here are some more numbers. Auburn is averaging 79 offensive plays per game. LSU is averaging 63. LSU is 11th in the SEC in offensive plays per game. The Tigers’ slower tempo on offense plays a large part of this, but only a part.

6. The play calling and game planning thus far this season have been very interesting. In his post game comments, Doug Moreau mentioned that LSU does not have an identity yet on offense. I agree. He went on further to say that the LSU staff must have a method to their madness; he just didn’t know what it was.

7. Let me take a stab at it. I have a feeling that the coaching staff is running certain plays to see how Jefferson does. Obviously they want to move the ball, but I think the staff may be taking a “big picture” view of the season. Let’s see what we are good at; let’s see what works, but don’t tip our hand too much. Leave the other staffs guessing what we will do when we get to the heart of the season. The only way this was possible was because the schedule set up very nicely. Bring the offense along slowly and stay patient. Mississippi State will be a challenge, so I expect a more “well defined” game plan. But don’t look for the offense to really open up until Georgia.

Defensively, the Tigers are looking a little better, but there are issues.

1. The D-line does not generate a pass rush. LSU is ranked 67th in the country in sacks and 70th in tackles for loss. The defensive line has not been as good as I expected.

2. As I mentioned last week, much is expected of the LB’s in this defense. Not surprisingly, the top three tacklers on the team are Harry Coleman, Kelvin Sheppard and Perry Riley. There seems to be improvement each week with this group.

3. LSU is ranked 19th is pass efficiency defense. The Tigers have 4 INT’s already as compared to 8 all of last season. Opponents are only completing 50% of their passes against the Tigers.

4. The defense has forced only seven ‘3 and outs’ this season. Compare that with Alabama which forced North Texas into seven ‘3 and outs’ this weekend alone and 16 for the season.

5. The Tigers are +3 in turnover margin.

Special teams were solid but not spectacular.

1. LSU ranks dead last in KO returns in all of college football. But the Tigers’ average starting field position after KO’s is the 32 yard line. I don’t know how that stacks up against others in the conference, but it is not terrible by any means.

2. It is VERY good to know that Jasper can hit a 52 yard FG.

3. Helton seems to have found his groove punting. He kicked 4 times for an average of 44 yards per punt. Bravo! As an interesting side note, LSU is tied for first in the nation for fewest punts on the season.

4. Holliday ranks 44th nationally in punt returns.

So what does all this mean?

I don’t think we can read this team yet. LSU could finish anywhere between 12-0 (try not to laugh) and 8-4 (try not to cry). Clearly this team has plenty of potential, but they must continue to improve to achieve anything this season. A win this weekend would push the Tigers to 2-0 in the conference and 4-0 overall, exactly where they were last season. My gut says LSU probably finishes 9-3, grinding out victories all season.  The matchup with Georgia on October 3rd will be a measuring stick game.  Let’s hold judgment until then.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Last Week's Odds and Ends

Sorry this is so late...was a little busy this week

*Talk about wild. In the first 20 minutes of the game, Georgia Tech and Clemson combined for four TD’s.

GT – 82 yard TD run.
GT – 85 yard punt return.
GT – 34 yard fake FG pass for a TD.
Clemson – 63 yard TD pass.

Dandy game.

*Oh Sparty, how can you live with yourself? After giving up a late score you hold off the Might Chippewas as they go for two to retain a 1 point lead with only a few seconds left. Bu then you let Central Michigan recover the onside kick. You force your smaller neighbor from up the street to kick a 47 yard game-winning field goal, which they miss. But out of the kindness of your heart you give the Chips a second chance by jumping off side. At this point, your fate was sealed. From a thousand miles away I knew that the kick from 42 yards was going in.

*Lou Holtz – suck it old man!! Notre Shame 34 – UM 38.

*Not Ready for Prime Time – Oklahoma State and Mike Gundy. After getting a huge win over Georgia last week, the Cowboys sleep walk against Houston and give up 45 points to lose by ten, at home no less. JC, you still think Gundy is better than Miles?

*Not Ready for Prime Time II – Tennessee and Lame Kiffin. It’s a little tougher when you have to play someone with a pulse. You think losing to UCLA hurts? Welcome to the Swamp. Pissing in Urban’s cereal bowl is not a good idea.

*Same Old Song and Dance – Big non conference game, Suckeyes come up short. USC drives down the field late to score and take the lead for good. OSU has lost six straight versus top 5 ranked teams. I still don’t get all the hype about Terrelle Pryor. Think about this, if OSU doesn’t get the GIFT pass interference call against Miami in the 2002 title game, what is Tressell’s legacy at this point?

*Same Old Song and Dance II – USC knows how to win the big ones. They may stub their toe this season, but it won’t be against any of the top teams on the schedule.

*The National Champion will come from this pool of teams – Florida, Texas and USC. No one else is even close. I know the Trojans only won by 3, but consider they went on the road with a true freshman QB and still won tells me all a great deal. Florida and Texas should ROLL through the season.

*Two weeks into the season, we have had four teams ranked in the top 10 lose. Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Virginia Tech and OSU. Poser Material!

*LSU is ranked 7th by the coaches and 9th in the AP poll. The argument could be made that LSU is undeserving of such lofty status. I would not necessarily disagree. The problem is, who are you going to put up there? If you take LSU out of the top 10, here are your candidates:

OSU – This is a good team, but there are serious offensive issues.

Oklahoma – No Sam Bradford. Nuff, said.

Georgia Tech – After watching LSU dominate that offense in the Peach Bowl and the performance against Clemson, I’m not sold.

Virginia Tech – See Ohio State.

TCU – Good team, but top 10?

Oklahoma State – Just got beat by 10 at home by Houston.

The point is, after the big four of Florida, Bama, USC and Texas, you can throw everyone else in a pot. The Tigers are a work in progress, as is the rest of the country.

*The other thing to take from the start of this season is that we need to look at teams and not necessarily conferences. Across the board you will see quality in each conference along with potential bottom feeders.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Defense Leads the Way

It was wet, at times ugly, but it was a conference win over a better than given credit for Vanderbilt team. LSU didn’t put the game away until Keiland Williams scored his second TD of the game with six minutes remaining. Vandy played well but LSU’s defense completely contained the Commodores’ offense.

*Defense was very good. The Tiger defense gave up only 7 points and 210 yards in the entire game. Take out the one scoring drive and Vandy managed only 130 yards. Vanderbilt was only 4-15 on third down conversions, a far cry from Washington’s proficiency of last week. However, the learning curve is still steep for some of these guys. On Vanderbilt’s only TD, QB Larry Smith ran a read option play. LSU’s DE Chancey Aghayere crashed down on the RB without even looking at Smith who fumbled the ball but was so alone that he was able to pick the ball back up and trot into the endzone. Overall, I’d have to grade the defense out as an A-, a stark improvement over last week’s D-.

*While LSU’s defensive line needs work, it appears the biggest weakness is at linebacker. The LB’s under Chavis’ system are expected to carry a heavy work load and I am not sure the current cast is up to snuff. Kelvin Sheppard can make plays, but he misses a lot of tackles and appears out of position at times. I am sure learning a new system takes a great deal of practice and dedication, but I am not sure Sheppard is a good enough football player to become anything more than serviceable to this team.

*The offensive line has not impressed me. The holes just aren’t there like they were last year. The pass protection is OK, but not great.

*The receivers don’t do great jobs of blocking. One of the keys to big running plays is the blocking by the WR corps. Too many times I saw WR completely flailing out in space and missing their blocks. The bubble screen only works if the WRs make blocks.

*I know they are bringing Jefferson along slowly, but I’d like to see a bit more of a vertical passing game implemented. Vanderbilt dared the Tigers to go downfield and was successful in crowding the line of scrimmage.

*Speaking of Jefferson, he does a great job of running the offense. Sure he needs polish, but in his last four games he is 56 of 94 for 595 yards, 6 TD’s and ZERO interceptions. I don’t want to jinx him, but I wonder who holds the LSU record for most consecutive pass attempts without an interception.

*RJ Jackson looked good. I would guess the majority of LSU fans saw #28 out there and said, “Who is that guy? Where’s he been?” I thought Ruben Randall would have wrapped up the 3rd WR spot, but obviously the 5th year senior Jackson has his own ideas.

*Finally, the pre-game video on the big screen at Tiger Stadium was AWFUL!! Whoever designed that junk needs to rethink his career.

Monday, September 07, 2009

Week 1 Random Thoughts

*Terrelle Pryor will be a great college QB, but he’s got a very funky throwing motion. Many of his passes look like ugly floaters. OSU looked pretty tame against Navy. I know USC is next so the Suckeyes were probably looking ahead, but come on. Championship teams look much sharper than this.  BTW: Terrelle Pryor just needs to shut up and play football...

*Greg Paulus looked great for Syracuse, up until he threw a terrible interception in OT. Guy hasn’t played football in four years then comes in and looks like a 5th year senior. Oh wait, he is a 5th year senior.

*Penn State looked very good. Same goes for the Mighty Spartans, Michigan and Northwestern. I now it’s Akron, Montana State, Towson St. and Western Mich, but they all looked sharp.

* The MSU front office needs to pay Dantonio whatever he wants. That guy will win a Big 10 Title before he leaves East Lansing.

*The Big 10 still looks mediocre on the whole. Iowa needed TWO last second blocked FG to beat a I-AA team. OSU barely survived Navy. Indiana beat I-AA Eastern Kentucky by 5. Minnesota was forced into overtime before beating Syracuse. Illinois got drilled by Mizzu.  Wisconsin had to hold off Northern Illinois to win by 8.

*If Ron Zook doesn’t make a bowl this season, he needs to go. They looked terrible against Missouri.

*If he does get run, the Illini need to sprint down the road to Cincinnati.  Brian Kelly has done a fantastic job with the Bearcats.

*Speaking of the Nati, they went into New Jersey and laid down a Tony Soprano style beating on Rutgers.  Looks like the Big Least is Cincinnati's for the taking.

*The Big 10 looks downright unstoppable compared to the ACC.  The ACC was 0-4 versus BCS conference teams.  Virginia and Duke even lost to I-AA teams!  Stay tuned!

*BYU is pretty good. I know Bradford got knocked out, but BYU is the real deal.

*That Alabama v. Virginia Tech game was great.  Tech's offense is awful, but they stayed in the game until the very end.  I have to tip my hat to Saban, as of right now, Bama looks to be the best team in the West.

*I am writing this as I watch the FSU v. Miami game.  It is 31-24 FSU with 9:30 left in the 4th quarter. Damn it's good to have college football back.

*I love the guy in the Miller High Life commercials...

*Guys, do yourself a favor and check out this dude's blog on Sports Illustrated's web site.  I was so distracted I don't even know if the blog makes sense.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

1-0 baby...

This weekend’s LSU game was rough on fans but leaves tons of material for an amateur writer/blogger. Where to begin? I try to stay positive, so we will start with the good stuff.

*LSU won. DO NOT DOWNPLAY THIS FACT. It was ugly at times and the defense stunk (more on that in a minute), but we went up the Seattle and won the game.

*Jordan Jefferson was very efficient. 11 for 19, 172 yards and 3 TD’s. He ran the ball 8 times for 42 yards as well. I would like to see the staff get him out of the pocket more though. He was very effective running the option and the QB inside read play.

*This was a coming out party for Terrance Tolliver. 4 catches for 117 yards and 2 TD’s. This is a great sign and will only help alleviate the pressure on Lafell.

*Special teams weren’t special, but there were no miscues. No botched snaps, no kicks blocked and no big returns by Washington. On Washington’s four kickoffs, LSU returned the ball on average to about the 35 yard line. LSU’s KO coverage was pretty strong.

*The Tigers were only penalized 3 times Saturday. Contrast that with Washington’s 11, Bama’s 10, Oklahoma State’s 15 or Mississippi State’s 12.

*Instead of giving away a pick-6, Jacob Cutrera picked off Locker in the first quarter and put LSU up for good. The Tigers never trailed the final 50 minutes of the game.

Now for the bad stuff:

*If not for Cutrera’s pick-6, I would grade the defense out as a D minus. Washington was 11 of 19 on third down conversions. The defense could not get off the field. Numerous times LSU got ahead in down and distance only to give up a third and long pass. It reminded me of Lou Tepper and Pelini’s first few games at LSU. That zone was very soft. Maybe it’s just me, but I feel that man coverage is in LSU’s DNA. We have such great athletes that we should just let them play. Combine that with some poor tackling and you had the most yards given up by an LSU defense in a long time.

*3rd and long killed LSU. In the first half, UW converted on a 3rd and 12, a 2nd and goal from the 17, a 3rd and 14, a 3rd and 8 and a 3rd and 9. Husky quarterback Jake Locker completed 8-of-11 passes for 137 yards on third downs alone. He also ran for 40 yards on five third-down carries. To their credit, in the second half, the Tigers gave up only a 3rd and 10 conversion and a 3rd and 12 on the final drive after the game had been decided.

*The front four generated ZERO pass rush for the most part. LSU had 8 tackles for loss, which actually surprised me, but many of these were in the second half against the run.

*Derek Helton STUNK. Four punts for an average of 32 yards per punt is garbage. Amongst players with at least four punts this weekend he ranks second to last. This has got to be fixed. This guy is on scholarship which is even more frustrating.

*The offensive line looked a little discombobulated at times. It may take a few games for this unit to find its rhythm.

*The offensive play calling left a lot to be desired as well. LSU’s strength was its speed on the corner which was not exploited. Most everything was between the tackles which UW bottled up well. We didn’t see any screens, misdirection or draw plays form Crowton. Play calling was very vanilla. Maybe this was by design.

My thoughts:

*LSU may have been a little fatigued from a tough fall camp. Combine that with the 2,600 mile trip and a game starting at 9:30 local and you have the ingredients for a tough night.

*Chavis and the defensive staff were at a bit of a disadvantage because there was no game film to study. Sarkisian was at USC for a number of years, but USC has never had a duel threat QB like Locker. Give UW credit, they came out prepared and executed.

*LSU never really adjusted to the sky kicks on the kickoffs. I would like to see more from this unit.

*I like Jefferson running, but he needs to avoid these big licks. OUCH!

*The offensive line struggled at time, but should get much better as the year goes along.  Ask Oklahoma and Oregon about breaking in new guys to the O-line to open the season.

*For all the talk we heard about Russell Sheppard and Rueben Randall during camp, neither of those guys saw the field. I am curious to see how this plays out. Could Sheppard redshirt in hopes of focusing on the QB position in the future?  What about Randall?  For all the hype I don't think he was out there once.  No knock on the kid, but it is curious.
*I think many LSU fans may be disappointed in this opening game. Everyone was telling themselves that UW went 0-12 last season and they are a terrible team, blah, blah, blah. Remember, LSU was pushed but never really threatened.  Disappointment is a mindset.  There is a lot to be positive about. 
*As usual, in reviewing the game, I feel better about LSU’s performance. I think Washington is well coached and will win a few ball games this season. I have faith in Chavis that adjustments will be made and the defense will continue to improve. Offensively, reviewing the game allows you to see that many of the mistakes are mental and can be corrected. Plus, as Jefferson grows as a player, so will the playbook.
*As of today LSU is not good enough to win the West, but the critical stretch of games don’t begin until October 24th when Auburn comes to town. The Tigers will get better each week so we should all continue to look at this season with cautious optimism.
*Finally, that may have been the poorest game I have ever seen ESPN produce. They cut away IN BETWEEN PLAYS in the first half and missed Tolliver’s long TD score. Then went to commercial without a replay!! Bob Davey and Mark Jones could not stop talking about Jake Locker. Actually they could not stop talking period. Usually I like Davey but tonight he was just annoying. Whoever worked the cameras from the production truck needs to get his ass kicked; repeated cuts to the UW sideline and the gushing about Sarkisian left me cursing at the TV.

No cursing here...except by UW's defense...



Friday, September 04, 2009

LSU Videos....

Isn't the internet great?

I found some VERY COOL LSU videos that some of you may enjoy:

Meet the Offense




Meet the defense





Going the Distance

Roy Jones would be proud....

*This is a great straight right to the jaw by Oregon's LeGarrette Blount:



Oregon's struggles on offense should be no surprise.  The ducks lost four seniors on the O-Line from last season and this is what you get, 8 points and 31 yards rushing on 17 attempts.  The O-Line is the foundation not just for an offense but an entire team.


*Here is an excellent article on Spurrier and his time at South Carolina:

The long decline of Steve Spurrier

* This guy has and excellent breakdown of the LSU v. Washington game:

LSU v. Washington

Thursday, September 03, 2009

LSU at Washington

The only real question I have about the game is this: How many LSU fans drinking at house parties in Baton Rouge are going to pass out before kickoff?
The experts have LSU a 17 point favorite which I think is about correct given some of the unknowns on an opening game. But I look for the Tigers to completely dominate this football game. Miles is 4-0 in season openers at LSU and the Tigers have outscored their opening game opponents 166-47 in those contests.
LSU’s offensive and defensive lines will be too much for the Huskies to handle. LSU has superior athletes and an experienced coaching staff. Washington has rookie head coach Steve Sarkisian looking to rebuild a program that went 0-12 last season. If you want to see how bad the Huskies were, click here to see the 2008 statistics. The offense scored 13 points a game and the defense gave up 38 points a game.

Look for Charles Scott to run up and down the field and the defense to look much more like the unit fans expect. You will get sick of hearing this from me, but John Chavis is a DAMN STRONG coach. Click here for Tennessee’s stats from last season. I ran a few numbers for Chavis over the last 10 years.

Scoring defense: avg. rank 23rd
Rushing defense: avg. rank 27th
Total defense: avg. rank 23rd

UT’s defense finished in the top 3 nationally against the rush three times during this period. Chavis’ crew finished in the top 13 six times in total defense since 1999.

Tigers will romp in the Pacific northwest.

LSU 37 – UDub 10

PS...On the offensive side of the ball, I am making a request now to see LSU run the wishbone at least once this season. Shepard under center, Scott in the fullback position, Williams at one tailback spot and Holliday in the other. PLEASE COACH!!!

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Rich Rod's Speech Writer...

If I had the privilege to write Rich Rodriquez’s statement regarding the allegations of violating the NCAA’s workout rules:
“I want to start out by saying that this staff knows the rules regarding work outs and we follow the rules. End of story. Anyone who says different is flat out wrong. This team went 3-9 last season. We haven’t beaten Ohio State since 2003. Our players need to understand the importance of hard work. Is there peer pressure amongst our players to go above and beyond what the coaches require? Absolutely. You think players from the top teams around the country are content with working out within NCAA rules and then calling it a day? Of course not. These players are self motivated and take responsibility for their own success.

I will tell you the same thing I told my players when I heard about this garbage. If you don’t want to be a Michigan Man, there is the door! I’ll release you from your commitment in a heartbeat. I am sick of guys around here treating this place like a country club. All the whinning and bitching makes me sick.  You know why so many players have left since we got here? They weren’t committed to winning. They were not committed to taking responsibility upon themselves to be winners.

I don’t get these malcontents in our locker room attacking the integrity of the Michigan program. All they are doing is hurting their teammates and the Michigan program by anonymously spreading these lies. I am sure these are players who are frustrated because they are being out worked by their team mates. They aren’t where they think they should be on the depth chart.  They think that since they have been here for a few years they are entitled to a starting spot. Instead of responding to the challenge and examples set by the leaders on this team, they would rather go to the media under cover of anonymity and spread lies to poison this program.

(Lower voice and give a steely glare) A true Michigan Man stands up to be counted…a true Michigan Man stands up to adversity.

Michigan is a great school and the Michigan Football program was great long before I got here or any of these players got here. It will continue to be an elite program long after I am gone as well. But I will be damned if I don’t do everything in my power to maintain the history of excellence of the Wolverines and the integrity this program is renowned for! (Pound on podium at this point)

I’m sick of this crap and all the negativity surrounding this program. We didn’t do anything wrong. And I’m not answering any questions regarding this bullshit; I have a game to prepare for.” (Walk off stage)

Quote of the Day

Oregon State has practiced a package that would occasionally place burner Jacquizz Rodgers at quarterback. You know what that means. Wild Beaver. Make it happen, Mike Riley.

Read more.