Greetings-
Sorry for the delay. Blog posts invariably take longer to put together than you think. Anyway, I mentioned in the last post Paul Johnson’s assessment of practice, and how he does that every Wednesday after practice, his last media availability each week.
After he said that he was a believer in the idea that how a team practices usually indicates how it will play after the N.C. State game, I thought it might be fun to re-visit his assessments before each game this season (except for the first) and see how it matched up with performance, along with my score (1-5) for accuracy. Forgive the tangent, but it’s sort of like how market watchers used to judge the size of former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s briefcase for clues about the reserve’s impending actions on the interest rate.
When Johnson meets with reporters after practice, Kelly Quinlan of Rivals always asks Johnson how it went and, in cases when he’s not there, Rod Mackenzie of Scout picks up for him. I guess Kelly is our Helen Thomas. For the literalists among you, I wouldn’t take any of this seriously. Onward…
Sept. 7, prior to Middle Tennessee State
“Guys were flying around, acting like they were having some fun. I think we’ll be ready to play.”
Result: Tech jumps out to a 28-0 lead, holds MTSU to seven points through three quarters and rolls to a 49-21 win. The Jackets ding MTSU with two one-play touchdown drives of 73 and 71 yards.
Score: 5. The most confident assessment of the season anticipates a demolition.
Sept. 14, prior to Kansas
“It was O.K.”
“It was a little better today than it was yesterday, so hopefully it’ll be better tomorrow and we’ll be ready to go.”
Result: Tech hammers the Jayhawks with 768 rushing yards and sets an NCAA record for yards-per-carry in a 66-24 rout.
Score: 2. The Jackets prepared for an assault on the school record books with a practice that barely passed muster.
Sept. 21, prior to North Carolina
“It was O.K. Nothing spectacular, but it was O.K. Not terrible.”
“Yesterday was pretty good. Today was just kind of average.”
Result: Against the toughest competition they’d faced to that point (and since), the Jackets pump out 382 rushing yards in a back-and-forth game that they win 35-28 with a 61-yard touchdown drive in the fourth-quarter. Tech’s run-defense issues become apparent as running back Giovani Bernard runs for 155 yards.
Score: 4. A sharp performance overall against a good opponent (particularly by the offensive line) with some holes on both sides. “Pretty good” was one of the more positive phrases used this season.
Sept. 28, prior to N.C. State
“It was good. It was O.K. Part of it was alright, part of it we weren’t dialed in like I’d like for us to be.”
Result: Tech came out firing and led 21-0 and surged again to a 45-21 lead, but the Jackets missed on a number of plays, allowed a 19-play drive (that didn’t result in a score) and got gashed for 195 rushing yards.
Score: 4. Kind of a tough one to grade, given that Johnson assessed practice in four different ways and Tech played hot and cold. Perhaps it’s fitting. But “not being dialed in” was a telling evaluation.
Oct. 5, prior to Maryland
“It was a little better. Practice this week has been a little better. So, hopefully we’ll play that way on Saturday. You never know. We’ve still got one more day to go.”
Result: Tech survives an upset attempt in a 21-16 win over Maryland in a game perhaps most noteworthy for Tevin Washington’s 32 carries and Terrapins defensive tackle Joe Vellano’s 22 tackles. The Jackets miss on a handful of big plays that likely would have changed the complexion of the game.
Score: 3. Another tough one to score, because I think Tech actually didn’t play that badly despite the score. Either way, Johnson’s optimism would have indicated a more decisive win.
Oct. 12, prior to Virginia
“It was all right, nothing great.”
“No, probably it wasn’t as good as last week. Last week we actually practiced pretty good. It’s a concern. We’ve still got tomorrow. We need to clean up a lot of stuff.”
Result: Tech plays its poorest offensive game of the season and takes its first loss, 24-21. The defense surrenders 272 yards and 24 points in the first half but pitches a shutout in the second.
Score: 5. Tech got whaled on at the start, evidence of a lack of necessary intensity. The coach saw it coming.
Wednesday, prior to Miami
“It’s been good. We’ve had two pretty good practices.”
Look back at Virginia
I talked to Virginia offensive coordinator Bill Lazor Tuesday about last week’s game. Not sure how much you care about it anymore, but just in case, a couple tidbits.
1. Going into the game, he had thought Tech was doing a better job stopping the run with “seven guys in the front and playing Cover-2.” That answer might sound bogus, I imagine, and perhaps so will my assertion that I thought the run defense was better against Maryland than the N.C. State game with the very glaring exception of the 77-yard run by quarterback C.J. Brown. Regardless…
2. He thought it was important to start fast, as is always the case, but especially so against an explosive team like Tech. He said he thought the offense did well except for the third quarter, when it only had the ball for one possession due to Tech’s 9:31 drive to open the quarter.
3. On the game-ending possession: “We were huddled on the sideline as a group and I think our guys were very determined that we were going to drive the ball. We threw a couple passes, but the way it was going, the run was really working.”
4. On Virginia at this point: “I think we’re at the point, our team is maturing, so as an offensive unit, we’re maturing and that’s part of where we are. We’ve got some returning linemen, we’ve got three backs who are all coming into their own. It was probably good timing for us to have an opportunity to finish out a game like that. Just everything kind of worked together. It was a day when we were running the ball well. I thought the guys executed the plan very well. … It just all came together. It was the right time to have that kind of situation come up. The guys were really ready for it mentally and emotionally.”
5. Just by the production, he couldn’t argue it wasn’t the line’s best game of the season. During the team’s bye week, coaches drilled hard on the running backs hitting the holes hard and blocking scheme and technique.
“So a lot of things that probably didn’t have to do with Georgia Tech came together. That’s the nature of football. You play a team in a certain moment, sometimes they’re up and you’re down. We were on the way up.”
6. I don’t think Virginia’s coaches thought the offense would have the day it had. “When we watched them, we said, ‘They’re better now at running their defense,’” he said. “That was our opinion watching and preparing.”
It was in response to a question about the Tech defensive line, which he sort of deflected with this answer. Obviously, he wasn’t going to say that he thought Tech’s defense was worse, but he also could have gone in different directions with his response, and I didn’t get the sense he was saying it just to say it.
One conclusion: For several reasons, Tech ran into Virginia on the wrong day, as often seems to be the case in Charlottesville.
Links
Stories on the one-game suspension of Miami defensive tackle Micanor Regis from the Miami Herald, Palm Beach Post and South Florida Sun-Sentinel. A Post profile of Hurricanes wide receiver Clive Watford, who started playing organized football as a high school senior and one from the Sun-Sentinel on wide receiver Tommy Streeter, who has five touchdown receptions and an 18.4 yards-per-catch average.
From the Herald:
“The suspension hurts the Hurricanes (3-3, 1-2) in more ways than one. The UM defensive line has been severely hit by injuries, and will face the vaunted triple-option attack of the Yellow Jackets (6-1, 3-1). The loss of Regis, the only healthy veteran tackle, means that the Canes have Adewale Ojomo (who was converted a couple weeks ago from defensive end) and junior college transfer Darius Smith as the remaining players with any real experience. Olsen Pierre, a freshman, is on the depth chart backing up Ojomo on the right side. Freshman Jalen Grimble, listed as an end, can also play tackle.”
Thanks for reading.
Ken Sugiura, Georgia Tech blog
239 comments Add your comment
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:09 pm
TN the D practices against the Scout Team running the Offense that weeks opponent runs. The D doesn’t work against our Offense.
Idiot_Savant
October 20th, 2011
10:10 pm
Ken Sugiura
October 20th, 2011
5:00 pm
super – it isn’t necessarily vulgar, but i’m guessing it was used enough as a vulgarity to necessitate it being placed on the filter. it’s aggravating, i know.
Ken,
Isn’t it possible to configure the software to only exclude the specific word, rather than a particular series of letters? I’ve heard that you can’t type the day of week that the games are played on the blog because it perceives the letters between “Sa” and “ay” as a vulgar word describing feces. Is there not a whole word option available on the filter? It’s just goofy to have to type GameClocks on a Southern football blog. Half of our mascots are either fighting chickens or fighting dogs.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:11 pm
TN Jacket….to some degree that is a valid point….when I was playing, we were taught to follow the ball from the snap to the conclusion of the play….”eyes locked on”….I would think that with no more looks at a more conventional offense than the D gets, coaches would be stressing this “eyes” and react style
TN Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:13 pm
UOAD – I realize the scout team has that responsibility, but the guys on the scout team are not the best athletes to practice against. I am sure the number one offense and number one defense practice against each other during the week, right?
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:13 pm
Still I think TN Jacket is on to something. I have often wondered how we practice to prepare against a big time passing team when we apparently have no one with a big arm to simulate the opponent.
Preparing against the run is less of a problem-we have plenty big time runners.
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:15 pm
Not Really because it doesn’t help the D to go against our O when the game plan will be nothing like it.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:16 pm
TN Jacket….yes they do see each other some, but my best guess is not much full speed, heavy contact. 5150 is correct about the scout team….they can be very valuable in portraying the “enemy”
Tech86
October 20th, 2011
10:19 pm
Dewberry was not a JUCO transfer, he transferred in from UGA after his freshman year, Dooley wanted him to play wide receiver and he wanted to be QB. Of UGA has JUCO academics, so maybe he did transfer from a JUCO. THWG GO JACKETS!!!
OldSchoolTechFanatic
October 20th, 2011
10:20 pm
We have got to cut down on the mental errors. I hate to sound like a broken record but Tevin please give the ball to Orwin more. Thanks in advance !
TN Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:20 pm
Still, when our offensive coaches are all about the option offense with different blocking schemes, motions, tendencies, etc, I think we don’t have the offensive coaching expertise on the opposing offenses to help fine tune the defense. Of course, Al Groh has seen every offense there is. Just a theory worth discussing.
George Stein
October 20th, 2011
10:21 pm
That was the joke, Tech86.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:22 pm
Tech86, I’m pretty sure the post about Dewberry transferring from a JUCO was sarcastic. I have to admit I was taken aback at first too, but then I thought about it.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:24 pm
ole yeller, poor tackling goes back earlier even than O’Leary. I have been screaming for years at the players who just reach out to try to grab an opposing player or when an opposing player manages to escape the grasp of one our defenders or bounce off him. Doesn’t anybody teach fundamental tackling techniques anymore?
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:24 pm
@Tech86 I see the more you typed your response you realized the JOKE is yes he transferred form UGA.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:25 pm
NOPE
Delbert D.
October 20th, 2011
10:27 pm
I taught it, or at least facilitated the teaching of it by being a tackling dummy for my first 2 years.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:28 pm
It really frosts me to see 2 or more Tech defenders all over an opposing ball-carrier, and he pulls all of them forward for anywhere from 1 to 5 yards. Why can’t they STOP him in his tracks or (oooh, major concept here) PUSH HIM BACKWARDS
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:29 pm
Oh boy, Delbert, you brought back some memories and a good chuckle
TN Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:29 pm
I read an AJC article about Dewberry a couple of months ago. He has used his Tech degree to become a very successful commercial real estate developer in ATL. I wonder what Quincy Carter is doing with his degr…..What the heck am I thinking!
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:29 pm
Delbert D well they didn’t hurt your head or brain while you were the tickling dummy. LOL
ole yeller
October 20th, 2011
10:30 pm
TN jacket, there’s a lot of truth in that theory. If I understand it correctly, the scout team is supposed to simulate the offense that would be run against the defense. The defensive scout runs the defense of the opposite team so it’s not like the defense will see something they have not practiced against. Here’s another theory. Paul Johnson is a very good offensive coach and will recruit offense before defense. He also has an advantage of recruiting players that do not fit into other major schools offensive scheme, but fits him for what he is looking for. No school out there is looking for anything different on defense. It’s the same at any school out there, look for big and fast on the defensive line and fast in the secondary. This is where P. J. looses it in recruiting. Not a knock, but he has more competition recruiting big and fast talent than he does on offense. He will take a talent that no one can use on offense and turn it in to gold. However on defense everyone is looking at the same players. Now you are looking at Ala. LSU. Tenn and Fl. and sorry to say UGA being your major competitors for talent. It’s a lot different. He is very smart and I am sure he has figured this out and will win some big defensive recruits. Given time he will get where he wants to be.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:31 pm
Supersize and all ya’ll….I see that very thing in every game I watch….again, I blame it mostly on ESPN highlights reels and NFL players doing the same….college mimicking pro
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:35 pm
You are so right ole yeller….if GT & CPJ can build a big time program, we will have our share of the big time recruits wanting to play for GT….today kids want a big time winning school
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:35 pm
Glad to see Justin Moore realized he needed some help and sought it from Morten Anderson. Sounds like their session went well. I guess we will see this Saturday.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:35 pm
1 4 GT, are you saying other teams have the same lack of tackling techniques? That’s pretty sad
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:36 pm
Smart that was on his part IL Jacket….had not heard that
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:37 pm
I had not heard that either, Il Jacket. It HAS to pay off at least a little
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:41 pm
It’s posted under the Jacket coverage on AJC.com
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:44 pm
Guys Ken posted a new article on Justin’s Kicking problems.
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
10:45 pm
Boy, that was a great call at second.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:45 pm
Yes I am Supersize….it is quite common….1 guy might try to slow him up while 2 or 3 more try to strip the ball….I do see it in every game I watch
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:46 pm
IL jacket. I tried to say that too. man the FILTERS are eating my stuff today more than ever.
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:46 pm
Real close play and the right call.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:47 pm
Looks like the Cardinals are still hot!
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:47 pm
forget stripping the damn ball. just bring the runner down
Delbert D.
October 20th, 2011
10:47 pm
That’s a good article on Moore and Andersen. Immediate results in practice, anyway.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:48 pm
I kinda want Texas to win it
5150 UOAD
October 20th, 2011
10:49 pm
TEXAS has it going right now.
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:49 pm
I yell those words at the TV, but they won’t listen to me.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
10:51 pm
LOL @ 1 4
RamblingReck
October 20th, 2011
10:55 pm
A comment in the Charlotte Obersver on the Miami thug who was suspended.
“No mention of his stomping on Gio Bernards hand in the same game? A one game suspension is not enough for a player who constantly goes out of his way to try an injure players. In the previous weeks game against Virginia Tech he pulled the same crap trying to injure players after the whistle. The college game has no place for a criminal player like this. He should be suspended for the rest of the year.”
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:57 pm
The Falcons had a r/b or t/e?? many years back that musta carried at least 3 men into the ez because of poor tackling & trying to strip the ball instead….20 yards or more!
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:57 pm
YEAH!!
1 4 GT
October 20th, 2011
10:58 pm
GO Texas
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
Well, hopefully Anderson’s work with Moore will pay of on FG attempts, but what about kickoffs? Why can’t we get consistent kickoffs?
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
That was a costly miscue by Pujols not cutting that throw on Andrus’s hit. Could have still been tied and the Cards would be trying to win it instead of tie it in bottom of ninth. An exciting, well played game.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
11:01 pm
I didn’t see the incident at UNC last weekend, and all I saw of the one at Vandy (clip then punch) was on replay, so I can’t compare the severity of the two, but on paper, I would think that both the Vandy player and the UGA player should have gotten full-game suspensions too.
ole yeller
October 20th, 2011
11:04 pm
Here’s another tidbit. All of us calling for a special teams coach, which I still agree with. Last year I had the fortunate experience of having a active e mail address with D Rad. I asked him the same question about hiring a special teams coach. He responded that the NCAA had a cap on direct coaching member staffing numbers and that G. T, had reached it’s limit. In order to hire a special teams coach someone off the current staff would need to displaced and that it was felt that the current alignment was appropriate. Now I don’t know if that is a hard fast rule but at the time it sounded reasonable. I feel now that someone should be let go and a special teams coach hired.
This was also at the time that he was trying buy out Paul Hewitt’s contract. So he may have been preoccupied with other thoughts. My thoughts with Hewitt and him at the time is another subject and another blog.
Supersize that order, mutt
October 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
ole yeller, I guess it makes sense that there would be a limit on the size of the coaching staff. Since Johnson doesn’t have an offensive coordinator per se, I would think there would be an opening somewhere.
IL Jacket
October 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
Looking grim for Cards now. Remarkable how the failure to execute the smallest detail can result in the game getting away from you.