Sunday, September 16, 2012
On IU Football, the Quarterbacks and Waka Flocka
Today’s take-a-good-look-in-the mirror moment comes courtesy of Indiana football coach Kevin Wilson. He’s a straight shooter not afraid to tick a few people off if they can’t handle it.
Take, for instance, the deeper meaning of the 41-39, last-second Ball State loss. The Hoosiers (2-1) have lost three straight to their smaller rivals, something that should never, ever happen.
Wilson took responsibility for the defeat, especially for the lousy second-half performance that, except for the final four minutes, showcased Ball State dominance. He got on himself and his coaches about poor halftime adjustments and took a few shots at the media, as well.
Wilson said, in so many words, that we in the media smirk and make fun of the Indiana program; that we don’t see the improvement and the change of attitude that is occurring; that this program and these players will learn how to win.
That we are, in essence, too cynical.
Imagine that.
Cynical sports writers.
The problem is, we’ve been here before. A never-ending series of IU football coaches have talked about change and improvement and pots of gold at the end of the football rainbow. It rarely happens, and never lasts.
Bill Lynch did it once -- going to the Insight Bowl in 2007 -- while building on Terry Hoeppner’s foundation. Bill Mallory did it six times in an eight-year span from the late 1980s to mid 1990s. Given the program’s consistent mediocrity, that has to rank as one of the more impressive coaching achievements of the 20th Century. Bo McMillen had a run of success when the Wizard of Oz was cutting edge movie technology, an era that is as similar to today’s challenges as Lawrence Welk’s music is from Waka Flocka’s.
Who’s Lawrence Welk?
Can we name ONE Waka Flocka song?
Don’t distract us.
Anyway, Wilson has more and better resources than any IU coach before him. He has more money, better facilities, more strength coaches, a nutrition expert and the ability to send injured players anywhere in the world for the latest and best medical procedures. The state produces better high school players than ever before. The academic support program ensures that all athletes can maximize their educational opportunities as well as their athletic potential. Memorial Stadium is a great place to watch a game, especially at night, when it is a showcase for all things Cream ‘n Crimson. Patience is critical because these Hoosiers are better and Wilson's background (success at every stop) suggests he can get it done.
If ever there was an opportunity for the Hoosiers to become a consistently successful program, this is it.
It all comes down to one thing – winning (and doing it the right way).
Everything else, is just hot air.
*****
For the record, there is no IU quarterback controversy. Wilson didn’t pull Cam Coffman in the fourth quarter against Ball State because he didn’t like the junior college transfer’s performance of suddenly became possessed by the spirit of Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly.
Coffman, Wilson said, suffered a second-half hip pointer. He couldn’t push off and get the necessary velocity on his throws. So in came true freshman Nate Sudfeld, and if he isn’t in league with Peyton Manning quite yet, he was solid in nearly directing a stunning rally over Ball State.
Sudfeld was 13-for-20 for 172 yards and two touchdowns, all in the fourth quarter. Granted, the TD pass to Cody Latimer was as easy a throw as you’ll see at the major college level. Latimer was wide, wide open because of a busted coverage.
But that misses the point, which is Sudfeld was calm, aware and in control.
"I felt comfortable, very comfortable, with the play calls during the week," Sudfeld said. "Coach Wilson gave us a list and said what do you like on third-and-long, what do you like in different situations. He just kept calling plays and I felt good about them. I knew the receivers would make plays, the line was giving me some time, so I just felt comfortable. I felt like I had been out there before."
Sudfeld, who was originally set to redshirt, played a little bit in the fourth quarter of last week’s blowout win over Massachusetts. He said that helped prepare him for his Ball State opportunity.
"I think it did help just the first time going in thinking I'm actually in a college game and (Saturday) I was ready," Sudfeld said. "It helped me get my feet wet just a little bit. But actually playing more (against Ball State), I think that helped out a lot, too."
After the game Wilson said Coffman's injury was not serious and he expects him to fine for the game against Northwestern in two weeks.
“
We’ll need both of those guys,” Wilson said.
Waka Flocka couldn’t have rapped it any better.
Friday, September 14, 2012
IU Needs to ‘Man Up’ Against Ball State
To understand how Indiana can, make that SHOULD, beat
Ball State, it’s important to understand that Carl Weathers got robbed out of
an Academy Award.
Yes, we’ll explain that.
Back in the early 1980s, Sylvester Stallone was making
millions off his Rocky movies. In Rocky III, due to a series of unfortunate
events, Apollo Creed (played by Mr. Weathers) became his manager as Rocky
prepared to fight Mr. T, known in the movie as Clubber Lang.
During the climactic fight, Rocky was crying about how
strong Clubber Lang was, that he was too tough to beat. In the scene that
should have won Weathers the Oscar, he delivered this memorable piece of advice:
“He’s just a man, Rocky. He’s just a man. Be more man
than him. Be more man than him!”
Shockingly, somebody else got the Oscar that year,
probably Robert DeNiro for Raging Bull, but that misses the point that for the
Hoosiers to win Saturday night, they have to be more men than the Cardinals.
Specifically, the offensive and defensive lines have to
play like they belong in the Big Ten, and not on the roster of, say, Savannah
State.
After almost two years in coach Kevin Wilson’s strength
training program, devised and implemented by strength coach Mark Hill, the
Hoosiers should be strong enough, bulky enough and fit enough to deal with Ball
State.
Of course, because sometimes the Hoosiers play true
freshmen at some of the line positions -- can you say Jason Spriggs and Dan
Feeney? -- the strength training longevity takes a hit.
Still, there are no excuses. Ball State has beaten IU two
straight times. It dominated the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball
last season at Indy’s Lucas Oil Stadium. That can’t happen again.
Well, technically it can. The Cardinals have one of the
nation’s most veteran offensive lines with lots of weight and strength, which
has helped produce one of the nation’s top rushing attacks. The defensive line
has a similar background, and it’s boosted by the arrival of former Ohio State
defensive end Jonathon Newsome.
The Cardinals were battle tested -- as Indiana hasn't been -- in a loss at powerhouse
Clemson last Saturday. They won’t be intimidated.
No matter. Ball State (1-1) is no Alabama. If IU wants to
show progress in Wilson’s second year, and it does, it has to win this game.
Don’t be surprised if victory comes through the air. Ball
State ranks 101st in the country in pass defense, allowing 279 yards
a game. This is great news for quarterback Cam Coffman. Sure, the junior college transfer is about to
start (assuming he didn’t screw it up with a poor week of practice) his first
ever major college game in the wake of Tre Roberson’s season-ending broken leg,
but he’s a calm, poised guy with a high degree of accuracy.
Coffman is very capable of leading the Hoosiers to a victory
and a 3-0 start heading into the bye week.
Here’s the reality -- if they can't beat Ball State at home, it's going to be another long, painful season in the Big Ten.
*****
Dan Dakich created a fire storm on his Indianapolis radio
show Friday afternoon by saying that, according to a source, elite recruit Trey
Lyles visited Kentucky in late July or early August while he was still
committed to Indiana.
The visit came during a dead period and, if true, would
be a NCAA rules violation -- if he met with UK coaches. If he just toured the
campus and had no communication with the coaches, it was no big deal. There
also was an implication that “somebody” from the Lyles camp (as in his father,
Tom) was interested in a college assistant coaching job -- as in IU -- tied to
Trey’s recruiting. In other words, if you want Trey, you have to hire me.
Lyles father denied it to Peegs.com’s Jeff Rabjohns and to
the Indy Star’s Kyle Neddenrip. He told them the first time his son had visited
the Kentucky campus was in early September.
Dakich never identified his source. He also never said
Kentucky coaches, in particular John Calipari, cheated. In fact, he said he
didn’t think Calipari was cheating. He also never said anything about a
violation of the dead period rule.
Still, his comments about Lyles, if wrong, could add complexities to his life. If he’s right, well,
expect even more publicity for what is already a VERY popular radio show.
Trey Lyles, in case you’ve forgotten, is a top-10 player
in the Class of 2014. He’s a 6-9 forward with guard skills. He committed to
Indiana before high school age, then backed off that commitment in August when
his ranking soared. He said he wanted to enjoy the recruiting experience, which
is his right. Cody Zeller and Gary Harris waited until October of their high school
senior years before announcing a decision. They wanted to make sure it was the
right one. Lyles wants to do the same thing. Again, as is his right.
Still, the de-commitment made a lot of IU fans unhappy.
Rumors flew, as they always do in situations like this, that something wasn’t
right. Evil lurked in the shadows.
Through it all, Lyles reportedly remains interested in IU. A ton of
big-time programs have now offered him, including Kentucky, North Carolina,
Duke, Florida, Butler, Ohio State and Stanford.
Coaches from many of those schools watched Lyles workout
at Indianapolis Tech High School earlier this week.
Yes, it's going to be an interesting recruiting process.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
On IU’s QB Plans; Kofi Hughes, Part II; Big Ten and Notre Dame
So what do we make of IU’s long-term quarterback plans
now that Tre Roberson is out for the season, but will return, thanks to a
medical redshirt, with three years of eligibility remaining?
Well, it creates intrigue, and as you know, we at Hoosier
Hoopla love intrigue.
The original plan was to play Roberson, use junior
college transfer Cam Coffman (pictured) as the backup and redshirt freshman Nate Sudfeld.
That would have meant that Roberson and Coffman would move on after two more
seasons, and Sudfeld would have his final two years as the undisputed No. 1
quarterback.
All that changed when Roberson broke his leg last
Saturday against Massachusetts. IU was forced to burn Sudfeld’s redshirt
status. That means, he and Roberson will have three years of eligibility
remaining after this season.
What makes this significant is that Hoosier coaches are
VERY high on Sudfeld. At 6-5 and 218 pounds, he might have pro potential. The
6-foot, 190-pound Roberson also might have pro potential, although perhaps not
as quarterback.
Does all this create playing problems for the future?
Not really. Coach Kevin Wilson said he could still
redshirt Sudfeld in the future to create separation between Sudfeld and
Roberson. Besides, Wilson added, the competition will make everybody better.
“It is what it is,” Wilson said. “To me, I think long-term, it will be a great opportunity to develop Tre even further. You might have considered redshirting Nate Sudfeld, but this happened at Oklahoma one year. We had an injury. We had to pull a redshirt off of a guy. We played him and then the following year we redshirted him and got his year back to balance it out.
“Now, you’ll have Nate, might have been redshirted, might not have. Potentially, you’ve got Sudfeld and Tre in the same class. There’s a redshirt year still coming for Cam Coffman if you want it. Now that Nate’s played, there’s redshirt years for him as well.
“There are certain schools that like to play more than one quarterback. I typically don’t like to, but I think you have to have two or three ready. My thought the other day too, when Tre got hurt, and you knew his season was over, well, we’re gonna need more than Cameron to get through the year, so let’s go ahead and play Nate. To me what that does for Nate, the more he plays this year, the more excited he’ll be, the better he’ll prepare. Now he’s going to be a sophomore. It is what it is.
“They’ll space it out. It won’t affect recruiting. We have those three guys. We need one more (quarterback). We need a fourth. We’ll keep building and go from there. The negative is we don’t have Tre for this week and this season. The positive, we’ve got all of those guys now for the remainder of this year, and for three or four more years, and we’ve got Tre Roberson for (three) more years.”
For Saturday night’s home game against Ball State,
Indiana has Coffman and Sudfeld and, to be blunt, a bunch of other guys you
don’t want to see playing quarterback for the Hoosiers. They might be wonderful
people, might go on to be great fathers and husbands and workers. They might contribute
greatly to society, perhaps by marrying Kim Kardashian and getting her out of
the tabloids once and for all.
But you don’t want to see them in a game.
*****
For some, it seems a no-brainer. Put receiver Kofi Hughes
into the quarterback mix as the No. 3 guy. He was a very good high school
quarterback at Indianapolis Cathedral who brings the kind of athleticism to the
position IU lost when Roberson went down.
Hughes played a little bit of quarterback out of the
Wildcat formation last year, but all he did was run.
Wilson didn’t sound enthused about the idea when asked.
“As a Wildcat guy, but then (defenses) would just put 10
guys up there with butcher knives and you run it three plays and punt.”
Yes, that seems a little extreme, but then Wilson had
more to say. He talked about how IU has allowed just one sack in two games, that
quarterbacks haven’t taken many hits, and that Roberson’s injury was “a freak
deal.”
“We’re going to protect the quarterback. That’s why Ball
State will come after us. There will be some great Big Ten teams that will come
after us, but we’re not just going to put (the quarterback) on an island,
either.
“Injuries are part of the game. You’ve got to move on. We
always need a third center; we need a third punt returner; we need a third
quarterback. But you don’t want to get to the third quarterback. We’ll talk
more positive and look forward to how well Cam and Nate are going to play.”
*****
By now you’ve seen the college football landscape got
rocked again with Notre Dame’s decision to bolt the Big East and join the ACC.
It will cost the Irish $5 million as Big East severance. For some schools, say
everybody’s favorite football patsy, Savannah State, that would be serious
cash. For Notre Dame, it’s barely an inconvenience.
The Irish will remain independent in football. However,
they have agreed to play five ACC games a year. This is an absolutely great
compromise. Both sides get what they want, and are better for it.
While the Big Ten downplayed it, this was a big blow. The
Big Ten has long sought to add the Irish, who would have joined the conference as
long as they remained a football independent. Big Ten officials said, in
essence, no way. It’s all or nothing.
So it was nothing.
A cynic would say, hey, that’s the same deal IU got with
Kentucky in basketball. It got Central Connecticut State in Assembly Hall
rather than the Wildcats in an epic showdown at Indy’s Lucas Oil Stadium that would have generated much needed more millions of dollars.
See, we told you we liked intrigue.
Monday, September 10, 2012
Could Kofi Hughes be IU’s No. 3 QB?
Just when you thought you know the state of Indiana’s
quarterbacks, we offer this bit of intrigue:
Is receiver Kofi Hughes set to be the Hoosiers’ third
quarterback?
It could happen. With Cam Coffman and Nate Sudfeld
holding onto the top two spots on the depth chart in the wake of Tre Roberson’s
season-ending broken leg (he’s already had surgery and is looking at a five to
six-month recovery, which might get him back in time for spring practice), IU
is left with a bunch of walk-ons.
Hughes, meanwhile, was a very good high school
quarterback at Indianapolis Cathedral. He also played some Wildcat quarterback
for IU last season.
“Kofi could take snaps at that position,” offensive coordinator Seth Littrell said. “We’ll find out. We’ll see. We have other guys on the roster. We have to get other guys ready at that position.”
Those “other guys” are walk-on freshmen Nate Boudreau, David Nelson and Corey Babb. Let’s just say it would not be ideal to have a freshman walk-on running your offense.
Here’s what coach Kevin Wilson had to say about that during Monday night’s radio show:
“After that we go to some walk-ons,” Wilson said. “We had some guys bail out on us. It is what it is. We’re fortunate to get two quality guys. Our next guy would be Corey Babb, who’s a very talented, big, 6-5, 225-pound kid who played at Cathedral. Strong-armed kid. He’s green as can be as a freshman. Not quite as polished as Nate. Probably the strongest arm as we have, but not as polished in running our system yet. He’s probably third. Then Nate Bodreau.”
The 6-2, 207-pound Hughes was the 2009 Gatorade Indiana Football Player of the Year after his senior season at Cathedral. He threw for 1,584 yards, 19 touchdowns and four interceptions that season. He also rushed for 1,552 yards and 22 TDs. He started for Cathedral’s 2008 state title team.
Hughes has played two years at receiver for IU. He caught 35 passes for 536 yards and three touchdowns last season. He also rushed for 162 yards.
Wilson used his radio show to emphasize that Coffman is the starter, but that’s contingent on the junior college transfer having a strong week of practice. Sudfeld, a true freshman from California, is very much in the mix.
Wilson used his radio show to emphasize that Coffman is the starter, but that’s contingent on the junior college transfer having a strong week of practice. Sudfeld, a true freshman from California, is very much in the mix.
“Cam’s the one on paper, but he needs to have a good week,” Wilson said. “He needs to play well because the other guy’s a good player. We’re not gonna have revolving doors, but in building a program, a beautiful word is called competition. It’s been a foreign thing around here. That’s one of the problems. Guys feel entitlement. ‘Hey, it’s my time.’ Hey, it’s his time to answer the call.
“We’ll see if (Coffman is) ready to answer the call. I believe he is. We’ve got a lot of confidence in him. He’ll do some things probably as well or better than Tre. There’s some things that Tre can do those other guys can’t. It’s a little different style of play, but we won’t change the offense. Some things will be emphasized. Certain throws he likes, certain things he does or doesn’t.”
As far as Roberson, Wilson said Roberson’s mother went to
the Massachusetts hospital where Roberson had his surgery, and that Roberson is
set to return to Indiana on Wednesday.
“He had a clean break about halfway between the ankle and knee, both the (tibia and fibula),” Wilson said. “It wasn’t a compound fracture, but a clean break. It’s one of those, the way they do it now, they put one of those titanium rods in there. He was at a great hospital. Supposedly the surgeries went well. It will be one of those pushing five, six month recoveries. He’ll miss this year, and playing only two games, he’ll get a medical year.”
Wilson also insisted losing Roberson doesn’t mean the Hoosiers can’t be successful this season.
“It’s just a tough deal for Tre, but at the same time, he was a quarterback who had won one game and was winning one quarter,” Wilson said. “I had a Heisman Trophy quarterback a few years ago (Sam Bradford) that got hurt in Game One. He’s already talked about how (Robert Griffin III, the 2011 Heisman Trophy winner from Baylor) broke an ankle his sophomore year and came back and had a good career. He’s got high goals high standards. He’s a special kid. He’s gonna be a great Hoosier. We’ll just have him for three years.
“As our team, we’re a band of brothers. We gotta rally up and keep moving forward. Everyone around thinks the sky is falling. It was a beautiful day. We had a great practice today. We’re showing up at 8 o’clock (on Saturday) and playing Ball State.”
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Coffman Can Thrive as IU Quarterback
Cam Coffman is no Tre Roberson. Let’s make that clear.
That doesn’t mean he can’t be effective as Indiana’s starting quarterback. That
also is clear.
IU coach Kevin Wilson’s offense is quarterback friendly
if that quarterback is accurate and smart and well prepared. Coffman needs to
be living in the film room for the rest of the semester.
Yes, he has classes and, one assumes, a social life.
Well, forget that. Now the sophomore and junior college transfer is a starting
Big Ten quarterback. A lot goes into that, and that has to be his all-consuming
passion.
If not, then it won’t go well.
But the, given Roberson’s season-ending broken leg
suffered in Saturday’s blow-out win over Massachusetts, it already isn’t going
well.
For the next couple of weeks, Coffman won’t face Big Ten
competition, and that gives him a break, but not much of one. The Hoosiers have
Ball State on Saturday, and if you pay attention to the record books, you’ll
see the Cardinals have won the last two meetings.
This is the next-man-up process that is so much a part of
sports. One person’s bad break (Roberson’s broken leg was very bad) is
another’s opportunity.
Roberson was a dual-threat guy who had dramatically
improved his accuracy and leadership skills. Coffman isn’t at that level, but he’s not
a statue, either.
Last year, Coffman led Arizona Western Community College
to the JUCO national title game. He threw for 2,444 yards, 21 touchdowns and
six interceptions while completing 61.4 percent of his passes. In the title
game, he throw for 291 yards and four TDs.
As a high school senior in Missouri, Coffman threw for
3,300 yards and 25 touchdowns. He also rushed for 680 yards and 8 TDs.
There is a ton of athleticism in his family. His father,
Paul, was a good tight end at Kansas State who later played for the Green Bay
Packers and Kansas City Chiefs. His brother, Chase, was a tight end at Missouri
and then for the NFL’s Cincinnati Bengals. Another brother, Carson, was a
quarterback at Kansas State.
Then there’s true freshman Nate Sudfeld. He was looking at
a redshirt season until Roberson’s injury. Then IU got him some fourth-quarter
action against Massachusetts to help prepare him in case he moves to No. 1 on
the depth chart.
The 6-5, 215-pound Sudfeld was an all-state performer in
California last season. He threw for 2,332 yards and 31 TDs with just six
interceptions. He was rated the No. 14 quarterback in the Class of 2012 and the
No. 23 prospect in California overall.
What does that mean for college?
Basically, he has potential. Like Coffman, he has a lot
of film study in his future.
Coffman played just over a half against Massachusetts and
finished 16-for-22 for 159 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions. Sudfeld
was 3-for-4 for 28 yards.
What does that mean going forward?
Not much. This was a really bad Massachusetts defense,
and by the time Coffman and Sudfeld got in, the outcome was decided. The
defenses they’ll face from now on will be much tougher.
As far as assessing Saturday’s performances of Coffman
and Sudfeld, Wilson was non-committal.
“It was a bit tough (to determine0 because by that point
in the game, the edge had been taken off the offense, there was a different
style of play and the weather changed (rain moved in) and got us a bit.
“(Coffman) will get better. We might have redshirted Nate
if the year were through, but now we will have to raise him back up.
“We will need both of these guys. There will not be a
competition for starter. Coffman will be the starting guy and Sudfeld will be
the backup. We will see how Coffman handles it going forward.”
Because Roberson played less than two games, he will be
able to get a medical redshirt, meaning he will have three more years of
college eligibility remaining. Wilson said he hopes to have Roberson back by
the spring.
Coffman said he had prepared himself for this
opportunity.
“The coaches were stressing that I need to be ready at
any point. I have been putting just as much pressure on myself during the week
as if I were the starter. I felt prepared. It’s an unfortunate situation with
Tre going down. He is in our prayers, but we have to move forward and keep gong.”
Coffman said he understands he’s a work in progress.
“I felt comfortable out there. I wasn’t too nervous. I
think it went pretty well, but there is a lot I can improve on.”
IU has three other quarterbacks on the roster. All are
freshmen -- Corey Babb, Nate Boudreau and David Nelson.
Nothing against these guys, but you don’t want to see
them on the field this season.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Passionate Crean Talks IU Basketball
Tom Crean as minister. Maybe it’s in his future. Maybe. The
guy has, after all, sworn off swearing. He can raise the passion in a room,
even a room as large as IU Auditorium.
While the auditorium wasn’t packed for his annual talk to IU
students and others who live the Cream ‘n Crimson dream on Thursday night,
there were plenty there who sought insight into the state of Hoosier
basketball.
And Crean spoke with a minister’s fervor, mixing in
basketball with the value of family, the value of education, the value of his
wife (Joani) and the importance of helping others and making IU a better
place. There was music (courtesy of the IU pep band) and video (yes, Christian Watford's Kentucky beating three-pointer received prominent display) and insight into the difference between motivation and inspiration (believe us, it matters).
But basketball was the reason for the crowd and, yes, Crean delivered, even drawing a standing ovation.
He said that Cody Zeller and Will Sheehey were the two most
improved Hoosier players on a team where everyone has improved.
Given Zeller was an All-America who would have been a
lottery pick if he had entered the NBA draft last spring, that’s impressive.
And speaking of impressive, Sheehey has become, if you
believe in VO2 measurements, the fittest player in IU basketball history. The
VO2 test has been administered at IU for decades as a way of measuring fitness.
Basically, you get on a treadmill and push yourself until your body caves.
Back in the 1970s, Hoosier player Jim Thomas set the
standard by going 13 minutes. No one had approached that mark until this
summer, when guard Jordan Hulls lasted 12 minutes and 36 seconds. Crean called
it “the best of the modern era.”
And then Sheehey obliterated it by going 14:06 and then
jumping off without fatigue forcing him to.
“The guys who were there were convinced he could have gone
another minute,” Crean said. “That’s what has to happen.”
Crean said there were three keys for the Hoosiers reaching
their potential, which if you believe the preseason polls and publications,
means at least a Final Four appearance, if not a national championship.
They have to get stronger, get better on fundamentals and
get better defensively.
“Our strength has to be better, and there are ways to test
that,” Crean said. “There’s the bench press, the leg squat, chin-ups.
“On the VO2 test, our guys had good numbers last year, but
this year the numbers are taking off. It’s an endurance test. It’s a
how-much-can-you-take test. We had a couple of guys take it to another place.”
A student asked Crean about the dropped Kentucky series. A
series that had been played since the late 1960s was dropped when neither side
could agree on a location. IU wanted to keep it on a home-and-home basis. UK
wanted to move it to Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium.
Crean said an idea was floated about a series involving Indiana,
Kansas, Duke, Kentucky, Louisville and some ACC teams, but that didn’t work out.
He said IU is working on a home-and-home series with another “high-level”
opponent.
As far as Kentucky, Crean said “We’ll wait for them to come
to their senses” about a home-and-home series. “It’s up to them. I think it
will turn and become a home and home… In our lifetime, they’ll be back here.”
Crean said IU will start a freshman and that freshman Yogi
Ferrell and senior Jordan Hulls will make a good backcourt.
Crean said a lot more – and we’ll detail that in our next
blog.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
No Way Indiana Loses to Massachusetts
Let’s face it. If Indiana loses to Massachusetts on
Saturday, it should drop football. Give it up. Concede the effort and try to
become a lacrosse power.
Seriously, there’s no way the Hoosiers (1-0) should lose
to the Minutemen (0-1). This is nothing against Massachusetts, but it might be
the worst football team in America. It’s an FCS (which stands for Football
Championship Subdivision, but is really just Division I-AA stated in a more
confusing way) program moving up to the FBS (which stands for, oh, heck, just
call it big-time!) level.
Against Connecticut in its season opener, things didn’t
go well. UMass lost 37-0. It totaled just three first downs. It had just three
rushing yards and 59 total yards overall. Repeat –- 59 total yards. That’s for
the entire game. Quarterback Mike Wegzyn was just 9-for-22 for 56 yards and an
interceptions.
Connecticut, by the way, is no Alabama.
Now Indiana rolls into Foxboro’s Gillette Stadium (yes,
that’s the home of the New England Patriots) fresh off its 24-17 win over
Indiana State. That victory was part execution, part luck and all relief. The
Hoosiers did a lot of things well, but also messed up enough that if they don’t
fix it, they’ll be in trouble down the road.
Not against UMass, though. Even if they mess up a few
things, they should win.
Of course, nobody in the Hoosier program will say that
publicly. That would be really dumb, especially given last year’s 1-11 debacle.
They have to stay hungry and humble.
Coach Kevin Wilson and his staff are doing everything
they can to ensure nobody takes the Minutemen lightly. That includes
guaranteeing no starting positions without performance. Each week guys have to
earn their starts.
No exceptions.
Check that. Quarterback Tre Roberson is as close to a
sure thing as you’ll see on the team. He’d really have to botch a bunch of
practices to sit the bench, and even then he’d still play.
But that’s not Roberson’s style. He embraces the
competition, which is a big reason why he’s had so much success. He was, after
all, an Indiana Mr. Football arriving in Bloomington with a lot of hype and
potential.
Roberson is starting to play up to it. Against Indiana
State he was 26-for-36 for 280 yards and a touchdown.
Anyway, IU coaches continue to push the message that if
you want to play, you’d better practice hard all the time. They brought in a
bunch of junior college players, mostly on defense, to ensure there would be
plenty of intensity.
“We’re trying to create competition,” defensive
co-coordinator Doug Mallory said. “We want them to work as hard as they can.
Guys sometimes think they can turn it on at game time. Your play reflects your
practice. We’ll play the guys who work the hardest and who produce.”
Beyond that, IU coaches want guys who know what they’re
doing and where they’re supposed to be. You’d think this would be simple, but
it’s not when you’re young (IU plays a ton of first and second-year guys) and
opposing teams try to exploit that with offensive complexity.
The more you know, the theory goes, the faster you play
because you just react instead of think.
“Sometimes when you know where you’re supposed to be,
you’ll get there a step quicker,” Mallory said. “Sometimes when you’re out
there thinking, you don’t react as quickly, and be a step late.”
Whether IU is playing Massachusetts or Wisconsin, it
can’t be late.
As for scouting the Minutemen, that’s a problem. There is
almost nothing to be gained by watching film of the Connecticut loss. That
means looking at tape of UMass games from last year, which would mean something
if it had the same coaching staff and system.
It does not.
Head coach Charley Monar was the offensive coordinator at
Notre Dame last year, so IU coaches looked at Notre Dame film to get an idea of
what Massachusetts might do. IU coaches also looked at film of Purdue’s defense
because the Minutemen defensive coordinator, Phil Elmassian, coached Boiler
linebackers last season. For special teams, they looked at Yale because special
teams coordinator Roderick Plummer coached there before coming to UMass.
UMass used to run a pro-style offense. Now it’s a spread
attack.
“These are games that I always have a hard time with,” Wilson said. “It’s kind of confusing and it’s kind of frustrating, because as you watch tape, you also watch players. But for the majority of tape we’re watching, we’re watching players we’re not gonna play against.
“I never like playing opening games playing teams with new staffs. Not that I was worried about them changing, it’s just harder than I want it to be. I don’t know. Visually I just always struggle with that view of football.”
That’s fine, as long as IU doesn’t struggle with the
Minutemen. The Hoosiers should win by 40 points -- at least. They need to show,
REALLY show, the patsy days are over.
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