Archive for the 'Notre Dame' Category

Re-living the Tennessee Volunteers 2005 football season: Part 9, the Fighting Irish

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

Pre-game

Daniel Proctor’s game day cartoon said it all:

Two UT players are in the front seat of a an old timey car with a Power T painted on the side and the words “Big Orange Bandwagon” painted on the side of a wooden truck bed. A tattered car flag is waving in the wind, the jalopy has no wheels, and the license plate reads “3-4 Vols.”

An exit sign overhead reads “South Bend exit,” and you can see the Golden Dome in the [distance]. One Volunteer is saying, “Hey, Coach! Is this our exit?” And then, turning around to see the empty truck bed, the tailgate swinging open, he says, “Coach?”

Proctor summed it up quite nicely. The wheels had come off, the offensive coordinator had been chucked, and the Tennessee Volunteers were clunking toward mystical Notre Dame and yet another top ten opponent.

Prior to the season, this match up was viewed as a top 10 power against a team in search of its identity. It was viewed the same way now, just with the roles reversed.

As Scout.com’s Jeffrey Stewart said:

These are two teams headed in opposite directions at the speed of light. The Fighting Irish are reborn under first year head coach Charlie Weis, the mastermind behind a potent offensive attack that is putting points on the scoreboard in bunches. With a 5-2 record that includes victories over Pittsburgh, Michigan, Washington, Purdue and Brigham Young, Notre Dame is best known for its instant classic cliffhanger last month against defending national champion and undefeated USC. That near victory propelled the Irish back into the top ten where they remain today at No. 9.

Conversely, Tennessee is in the depths of a spiraling free fall from a preseason ranking of No. 3 through a 3-4 start, until it was finally spit out of the bottom of national polls last week, following a 16-15 defeat to that other USC. The one with the roosters on its helmet and no national championships under its belt.

The Vols dramatic demise is the result of an offense that rarely has a pulse and produces points at the pace of the Tunisian national ice hockey team. If you say it’s not fair to compare Tennessee’s offense to a team that doesn’t exist. Well, I rest my case.

To make matters worse, the Uh-Oh stat loomed large. UT had shown a recent tendency to turn the ball over in the red zone while Notre Dame had developed a knack for taking it away in the red zone.

The game did, however, offer a classic match up of UT defensive coordinator John Chavis versus offensive mastermind Charlie Weis. Quality against quality. At least when Notre Dame had the ball.

With UT’s well-publicized offensive struggles, you’d have thought that this would be a trap game for the Irish. Unfortunately, Weis didn’t think so, and he had his team ready.

The game

NOTE: A larger version can be found on the Animated Drive Chart page.

Tennessee had more first downs and more net yards rushing, generally a formula for victory. The Irish, however, had Tom Zbikowski, Brady Quinn, and a corps of receivers who could actually catch the ball led by Jeff Samardzija.

Notre Dame had pass plays of 73, 43, and 35 yards to three different receivers. Their first drive consisted of passes of 4, 9, 9, 15, and 9 yards before the 43-yard pass to Anthony Fasano for a touchdown.

On the ensuing kickoff return, Lucas Taylor fumbled the ball and the Irish recovered at the UT 27. On third and 18, Quinn threw a 35-yard TD pass to Maurice Stovall.

See that five yard drive on Tennessee’s fifth possession? It ended with a punt to Zbikowski, who returned it 78 yards for yet another touchdown.

The Vols did get one touchdown drive before the half, but the game was feeling like a rout.

NOTE: A larger version can be found on the Animated Drive Chart page.

Tennessee did get a little momentum going in the second half, scoring a field goal and a touchdown on their second and third drives respectively. They had tied the game.

The 21-21 tie did not last long thanks to a short pass from Quinn to Samardzija, who took it 73 yards to the UT two yard line and scored a few plays later.

It was all down hill from there. On UT’s next drive, Ainge threw an interception to Ambrose Wooden. He was an absolute mess after that:

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, and 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.

The play was not only remniscent of the LSU Decision, but it was the second intentional grounding call against Ainge. Luckily, this time, it was not intercepted.

On the first play of the next series, with Tennessee down two touchdowns with under 4:00 minutes to play, Ainge again found no receivers open (maybe not his fault) and scrambled out of the pocket toward the sideline. But instead of running out of bounds to stop the clock, he slid down just in bounds. Like he was trying to do just that. The clock kept ticking.

On the very next play, Ainge threw an interception directly to [Zbikowski], who ran it in for a touchdown.

Post-game

And so the Tennessee Volunteers’ expectations had to be recalibrated yet again, this time to the nth degree:

[T]he Vols’ must now win out — not in order to get to the Rose Bowl, or to get to a BCS bowl, or to even get to the Citrus Bowl — but to get to any bowl.

It wasn’t all Ainge’s fault. Much of the blame rested with the receivers, including highly touted Robert Meachem, who barely missed a sure touchdown and didn’t even stretch out to catch the ball. Indeed, John Pennington observed that had the teams traded quarterbacks, it would not have mattered:

Let’s put Brady Quinn in Vol orange for a second. Would he turn this team around?

On Saturday, he got passes NEAR his receivers. They took it from there. A one-handed catch by Jeff Samardzija. A catch (barely out of bounds) by Samardzija where he jumped up and took a pass away from a Vol DB. A 5-yard reception that Samardzija took 73-yards to set up the go-ahead score. A juggling catch by a tight end. WR Maurice Stovall jumping out of his skin to bring down a finger-tip touchdown catch.

If Brady Quinn were a Vol… he would get NONE OF THAT. In this game he would have led the Vols to about the same number of points as they scored without him. His RECEIVERS made plays for him… and drove up his TD and yardage numbers even though, for most of the day, he just got the ball in their vicinity. He was far from laser-perfect.

I agreed, adding:

The fact that the receivers wore green jerseys in practice up until a couple of weeks ago seems to me to indicate that the coaches were more concerned about perfecting their ability than practicing their performance. What exactly were they practicing? Running fast? Running routes? Being tall and strong?

Were they practicing going up for a ball with aggressive defenders in their faces?

Or did the green jerseys tell the defenders to take it easy on them?

Torching the green jerseys may not have been too little, but it certainly was too late.

The Vols were now 3-5 and spiraling out of control. The team was in desperate need of the services of the season-long, now ironic sponsor of the local sports talk radio show, Joseph Construction Disaster Cleaning and Restoration.

Poll: What team is most likely to be this year’s Tennessee?

Friday, June 23rd, 2006

Well, after 47 votes, most readers (30%) believe that Florida is the team most likely to follow in Tennessee’s footsteps and parlay high expectations into bitter disappointment this year. Notre Dame wasn’t far behind with 23%.

I think it’s Florida, due to a potential quarterback controversy, which I am doing my utmost to inflame,
an overrated offense, and a brutal schedule that includes games at Tennessee, at Auburn, at Florida State, home games against Alabama and LSU, and the annual game against Georgia in Jacksonville. That’s the SEC East schedule, the three best teams in the SEC West, and a closer with FSU.

Final BlogPoll

Sunday, January 8th, 2006

Still having intermittent problems with the blog, both on my side and on my host’s side. Sneaking this in before the window of opportunity closes again.

1. Texas

2. Southern Cal

3. Penn State

4. West Virginia

5. Ohio State

6. Georgia

7. Louisiana State

8. TCU

9. Virginia Tech

10. Alabama

11. Oregon

12. UCLA

13. Notre Dame

14. Wisconsin

15. Auburn

16. Florida

17. Boston College

18. Miami

19. Texas Tech

20. Louisville

21. Florida State

22. Clemson

23. Oklahoma

24. Nebraska

25. California

Bowl Championship Series Team Blogs

Tuesday, December 20th, 2005

As the bowl games draw near, here’s a list of BCS team blogs to help you keep up with the teams that are, you know, still playing football. Salty language warning for some of these.

Rose Bowl

USC Trojans
Texas Longhorns

Orange Bowl

Penn State
Florida State

Does anyone in Tallahassee blog?

Fiesta Bowl

Notre Dame
Ohio State

Sugar Bowl

Georgia
West Virginia

MGoBlog Blog Poll

Monday, December 5th, 2005

1. Texas: UT gets nod over USC only because of USC’s would-be loss to Notre Dame
2. USC: Basically neck and neck with the Longhorns
3. Notre Dame: Two bad calls on final two plays cost them victory over USC
4. Georgia: SEC champ
5. LSU: SEC runner-up
6. Florida: Lost three games, but beat both SEC champ and ACC champ
7. Penn State: Only one loss, but docked for not having to play a championship game
8. Ohio State: Only losses to Texas and Penn State
9. Florida State: Yeah, four losses, but still champ of tough ACC conference
10. Virginia Tech: ACC runner-up
11. Georgia Tech: Four losses, but beat both Auburn and Miami
12. Auburn: Stumbled out of the gate and lost to SEC runner-up LSU, but beat SEC champ Georgia
13. Miami: Throttled ACC runner-up Virginia Tech
14. Alabama: Only losses to SEC runner-up LSU and number 12 Auburn
15. Oregon: Only one loss, but docked for relatively weak conference
16. West Virginia: Received a BCS berth while never cracking the top ten
17. Michigan: Beat Big 10 champ Penn State, but lost four games
18. UCLA
19. Clemson: Beat ACC champ FSU, but who didn’t?
20. South Carolina: Wins over Florida and Tennessee not as impressive in hindsight
21. TCU
22. Northwestern
23. Iowa
24. Iowa State
25. Louisville

The Animated BCS Race to the Rose Bowl: Week Twelve

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2005

Entering the home stretch:

The Trojans and the Longhorns remain Nos. 1 and 2, and Penn State, LSU, Virginia Tech, and Ohio State all move up one spot due to Miami falling from No. 3 to No. 9 after losing to Georgia Tech. Oregon jumped from No. 10 to No. 7 after clobbering Oregon State, and the Fighting Irish improved by one position. Auburn rounds out the top ten.

The Tennessee Volunteers round out the top 117, and some players are behaving badly.

Games remaining that either will or could impact the Race:

  • Texas at Texas A&M, November 25, 2005 (12:00, ABC)
  • UCLA (12) at USC (1), December 3, 2005 (4:30, ABC)


See the Race to the Rose Bowl from the beginning:

More Returns on the Is There Life After Death Valley for Erik Ainge Question

Tuesday, November 15th, 2005

One more game, and the jury is still out on the Is There Life After Death Valley for Erik Ainge question:

Just last week Ainge was telling a circle of reporters how he had come to realize the importance of dumping the ball off to a running back instead of trying to force a pass downfield. Here’s the exact quote:

“Just because they call a play with three verticals (deep routes) doesn’t mean I have to throw one of the verticals. We have a lot of layoffs and stuff. That’s one thing I’ve gotten away from. I’ve been trying to make stuff happen down the field.”

That comment suggested Ainge had seen the error of his ways and would not be throwing any more ill-advised passes like the ones against LSU (Game #3) and Notre Dame (Game #8) that were intercepted and returned for touchdowns.

“That’s not what I’ve been coached to do,” he said. “If it’s not open, throw it to the running back. A lot of times watching the film I’ve seen where we had guys open short and I was trying to stick something in downfield.

“I think that’s the biggest thing (he has learned) now: I’m going to give us a chance to make the big plays but I need to put us position where we’re not relying on those alone to win the game.”

Hearing these comments, you figured Ainge would go out and make sound decisions in Game 9 against Memphis. Instead, he threw an interception on his third pass attempt and another on his fourth.

Calling David Cutcliffe.

Calling David Cutcliffe.

The BCS Race to the Rose Bowl Animation: Week Eleven

Monday, November 14th, 2005

UPDATE: This is Week Eleven. If you’re looking for the latest, see the Animated BCS Race to the Rose Bowl: Final Bowl Selections.


Only a few weeks left to go, and the Race to the Rose Bowl is tightening:Alabama’s loss to the LSU Tigers left the USC Trojans and the Texas Longhorns as the only remaining unbeaten teams. Miami moves up to the third spot behind the unbeatens, and LSU vaults over the Hokies to the fifth position behind number four Penn State. Georgia dropped out of the top ten after a loss to Auburn and is replaced by Notre Dame.

Games remaining that either will or could impact the Race:

  • Texas at Texas A&M, November 25, 2005 (12:00, ABC)
  • UCLA at USC, December 3, 2005 (4:30, ABC)

See the Race to the Rose Bowl from the beginning:

Scout.com: Slip Sliding Away

Thursday, November 10th, 2005

Scout.com’s (subscription required) Jeffrey Stewart comments on the field conditions at Notre Dame:

At times it looked like the game was being played on a Slip N’ Slide instead of grass with players on both teams routinely losing their footing and falling on their rears. Poor field conditions were conspicuous throughout the game and played a significant role on several critical plays, but somehow they managed to escape the notice of NBC’s analyst and announcer.

Tennessee Volunteer Wide Receiver Robert Meachem on Dropping Passes Against Notre Dame

Thursday, November 10th, 2005

Tennessee Volunteer wide receiver Robert Meachem discusses dropped passes:

My thing is, you drop a ball, you’re dropping money for your mom.

You play the game to have fun, but in other ways you want to help your mom and help everybody in your family get to do some things they’d love to do.

* * * *

To me it was like I really lost the [Notre Dame] game because if I had caught those two passes we would have had a chance to win . . . . I replay those plays in my head every day thinking about what I could have done different.

* * * *

Guys say forgive and forget. I can forgive myself, but I just can’t forget those two plays.

Both those balls Erik threw, he couldn’t have thrown them any better. I should have laid out for the first one, and the second one I should have just run through and got it.

* * * *

I’m probably my own worst critic. I’ve put a lot of pressure on myself ever since I was in elementary school.

I used to play running back, and if they pitched it to me and I fumbled it I would be so mad at myself.

* * * *

When the ball’s in the air, you’re supposed to go get it. That’s what PW teaches us all the time.

You watch T.O. (Terrell Owens), Randy Moss, Chad Johnson, you watch all those big-name guys, when the ball’s in the air — on the fade or whatever it is — they go get it.

* * * *

It’s really frustrating because last year we had the same team. The only thing different is we’re a little bit better than we were last year.

It’s a break here and there in every game. We’re still the same guys. We still want to make those same plays. Just right now, it’s not going our way.

* * * *

I love catching the ball, blocking and having fun with my teammates. That’s just two passes, but to me that’s 100 yards you might have had.

I’ve got a lot of games to play, but maybe one day I’ll make those catches. Then maybe I’ll be making those catches in the NFL that I dropped at Notre Dame.