Is There Life After Death Valley for Erik Ainge?
It should be safe to say that this week has not been the best of Tennessee Volunteer quarterback Erik Ainge’s life. The week before was not the best of weeks for quarterback Rick Clausen.
What would be worse, having the starting job unfairly taken from you despite earning it with years and years of persistent hard work and better overall performance than the other guy (the reason for Rick’s bad week) or losing the starting the job with a series of mistakes with the world watching (the reason for Erik’s bad week)?
There really should be no debate about who the Vols’ starting quarterback should be after last Monday night’s incredible come-from-behind victory in the second half versus the LSU Tigers in the Bayou. This is Rick Clausen’s team, and it shows.
But is there life after Death Valley for Erik Ainge?
Sure, if he and his coaches can identify the challenges ahead. Here are a few candidates:
- Improve Decision-Making. One of the big differences between this year and last is that last year, Offensive Coordinator Randy Sanders was making all of the pre-snap decisions for the quarterbacks from the sidelines. How many times last year did we see the offense line up only to all stand together and look for the signals from Sanders? It seems like 80-90% of the time, Sanders called the formation, read the defense, signaled the coverages, and called the plays with a series of cryptic pantomimes from the sidelines. Press go, and the team executes. We’ve hardly seen that at all this year. The coaches are entrusting more of the decision-making to the quarterbacks, and Clausen has simply done a better job than Ainge of picking up blitzes, checking out of bad plays into good plays, and making other sound, quick decisions. But Ainge can learn.
- Forget Last Year’s Injury. A caller to Knoxville talk radio this week suggested that Ainge has not mentally recovered from last year’s season-ending injury. Remember that it happened when an errant shotgun exchange got past Ainge, and when he tried to scoop it up he was intead sacked by Notre Dame defenders and thrown awkwardly to the ground. The play is burned into the minds of Vol fans, and it’s surely imprinted on Ainge’s psyche as well. Could this explain his reaction to Monday night’s pressure in the end zone, just trying to get rid of the ball at all costs?
- Develop Chemistry. It’s been widely reported this week that Clausen is the team’s choice for quarterback. They like him. They respect him. The team just seems to click better when he’s at the helm. The bottom line is that Clausen’s leadership spawns team chemistry. That’s not to say that Ainge does not have these qualities — he may have them, but just not to the degree that Clausen has them now. I’ve seen a few images during the games that make it look like he’s arguing with teammates, but I’ve also seen him keep himself involved in the offense when he’s on the sideline and applaud Clausen’s success.
Ainge can weather this storm. He’s already getting good advice (subscription required) from the right people. His father, a coach and a teacher, has said to Erik, “Be patient. Your time will come again.”
Ainge will have his own chance at a comeback, a chance at life after Death Valley.
November 5th, 2005 at 8:28 pm
[...] Well, it seems that the answer to this question is . . . maybe . . . no. [...]
January 15th, 2006 at 10:34 pm
[...] Well, it seems that the answer to this question is . . . maybe . . . no. [...]
June 28th, 2006 at 3:24 pm
[...] In the Notre Dame game, the early returns on the Is There Life After Death Valley for Erik Ainge question were in. Uh, looking like . . . no. Having thrown one interception against Notre Dame with the team down by a touchdown (he gets some slack for that . . .), he was a mess the next series. The Vols opened the drive deep in their own territory with a delay of game penalty. After a kickoff. On third and long, Ainge dropped back, looked down field, and found all receivers covered. The defensive end broke free of a block and wrapped his arms around Ainge. As Ainge was taken to the ground, he flipped a pass toward the scrimmage line. [...]
July 23rd, 2006 at 2:59 pm
[...] The talk of the town all week was where the LSU game ranked as one the team’s all-time best games and whether there was life after Death Valley for Erik Ainge. There was almost no talk about the team’s next opponent, the Ole Miss Rebels. The situation was ripe for a let down. [...]
August 14th, 2006 at 9:31 pm
[...] It’s still the question two full years later. Who’s our quarterback? Is there Life after Death Valley for Erik Ainge? Will the promising young Jonathan Crompton overtake Ainge? Will Ahead-to-the-Past offensive coordinator David Cutcliffe work his Manning/Shuler/Martin mojo on either of them? [...]
August 15th, 2006 at 5:52 am
[...] Erik Ainge drew favorable comparisons to Peyton Manning his freshman year, and for good reason. He completed 109 of 198 passes for 1,452 yards and 17 touchdowns in nine games before a shoulder injury against Notre Dame ended his season. The following year, he got off to a good start, but morphed into a mushroom cloud in the end zone at LSU. The question then became Is There Life After Death Valley for Erik Ainge? By the Notre Dame game, the early returns suggested, well, maybe not. [...]