Ok. I'll admit it. I'm spoiled.
Since the year 2000, when Nick Saban began the revitalization of the LSU football program, I have become accustomed to a certain football lifestyle. A winning lifestyle.
Not just winning, but WINNING!!
Four SEC and two BCS championships and numerous top ten finishes will do that to you.
So when debacles such as the Ole Miss game occur, it shakes one to his football core.
Coming off an impressive win against an SEC talent rich team, gaining momentum and everything still in play for LSU, they go to Oxford to play a team on the mend. After spanking the Big 12's Texas, who's coach is on a standing eight count, Ole Miss has suffered three consecutive SEC defeats. Missing five defensive starters including three on the d-line plus their homerun hitting runningback, Ole Miss was down to their last out. The only thing head coach Hugh Freez had going for him was the fact that one of their most hated rival was coming to town. So motivation would not be an issue. LSU has long forgotten that this was once an intense rivalry between two border states with rich football traditions. Over the years, as Ole Miss began to flaunder, this game lost it's importance to LSU.
Not to Ole Miss.
Banking that a Les Miles' LSU would read about all those Ole Miss starters missing and will do what they always do, play down to their opponent and coupled with the natural letdown from the Florida win, Freez new Miles' boys were thinking, "Ole Miss, Furman then a bye, three weeks to prep for Bama".
In a great example of scouting a team, Freez new the usually reliable LSU defensive coordinator John Chavis was going nuts trying to get a handle on his own unit and the book on offensive coordinator Cam Cameron was that he just can't stop himself from throwing the long ball. Freez's staff came up with a gameplan of patience on defense and creating confusion on offense.
Just like the turkey that walks right toward the caller, Miles and his staff walk right into Freez's trap.
After a couple of three and outs and getting a feel for what Chavis was doing, Freez's offense went to work. Compiling over 500 total yards, converting an agonizing 11 of 18 third downs, all seemed to be 3rd and long, Ole Miss wore down the unit which, unlike their counterparts, started the game with all hands on deck. But the unkindest cut of all was that someone named Jalen Walton, a little used 5'8" 168lb RB, who, I'm certain, no one associated with the LSU football program ever heard of, gashed Chavis' once proud defense for 106 yards rushing and an astounding 5.6 avg per carry.
Freez's plan for LSU's high powered offense worked even better. With a unit as undermanned as King Leonidas against the Persians, Freez used Cameron's impatience against him. In a game very revealing as to why he was canned in Baltimore, Cameron couldn't resist going for kill shots on three first half occasions when body blows were all that was needed. Freez's defense was ready. He had his safety in position and waiting for the opportunity Cameron would present him. The result was three influential interceptions. Score changing, momentum swinging and inspiration providing pics that sucked more life out of LSU and injected more into Ole Miss with each one.
Watching the game, one had the sense that by the 4th quarter, as Ole Miss' valiant defensive effort would wear down, LSU would pull away. The Ole Miss defense did wear down, but by then, the damage of mishandling the first half was done. For someone who demands discipline from his quarterback, Cameron displayed very little.
Freez doesn't deserve all the credit, however.
Les Miles' mind blowing knack for giving lessor talented teams hope continues to amaze. His gametime decisions and clock management gaffes baffle even his most loyal apologists. And his incoherent explanations embolden his detractors. He preaches respecting every opponent by giving your best effort yet rarely displays it on gameday.
Some would suggest the players must shoulder the responsibility for the Ole Miss loss. To that I would respond that in college football, you play as you are coached.
Into his ninth season, we all have a true reading of how Miles' teams are coached.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Thursday, October 3, 2013
LSU '13 Lacks Defensive Playmakers
Baton Rouge, we have a problem.
LSU '13 is in crisis.
There's not much time.
Grab some spare parts, make a defense.
Get them home.
Failure is not an option.
As LSU scrambles to come up with answers for their dismal defensive performance against Georgia, the cold truth is there may not be any, given the mass exodus of defensive starters form last year. Typically a John Chavis defense has players waiting in the wings for their turns to shine. Not this year. Since the second half of game two, Chavis' group has shown little signs of growth.
At first played off as youthful lack of focus after building a big lead, it's now feared the loss of starters is a bigger burden than once appeared. That youthful lack of focus has turned into mass confusion as the level of competition rises.
The consensus is that the lack of experience has been the major factor in the decline of the defense. That a lineup stacked with underclassman with little prior playing time is to much to overcome.
In the words of the great Lee Corso, "not so fast, my friend".
While it's true LSU has a number of new starters, it's really not much more than the usual attrition in todays college football landscape. Consider LSU. Since 2010 attrition has hit the defense hard. Five starters left after 2010, six after 2011. Of those five in '10 were Patrick Peterson, Drake Nevis and Kelvin Shepard. Among the losses in '11 were Michael Brockers and Brandon Taylor.
Each time attrition hit Chavis, the defense came back stronger. The 2011 defense replaced 2010 loaded with playmaking sophomores lead by a honey badger and a junior named Claiborne. It will go down as one of the finest defensive units in LSU history.
Which leads us to the 2012 defections. Mingo, Montgomery, Minter, Reid and Simon. Big losses no doubt, but replaced by players with ample enough playing time for a smooth transition. Remember, Eric Reid, Kevin Minter, Tharold Simon and Kiki Mingo all played sparingly in 2010. In their first season of fulltime play in 2011 two(Reid and Mingo)were all Americans and Minter was all SEC.
The 2013 LSU defense consist of five juniors, three seniors and three sophomores. It ain't all a lack of experience it's a lack of playmakers that has this unit clinging to it's football life. It's also a lack of depth, awareness and too many underperforming four and five star recruits. But the biggest thing is the lack of playmakers.
Playmakers change games and create momentum. They force fumbles, intercept passes and sack the quarterback. But most of all they create fear in their opponents. Coaches, quarterbacks, wide receivers and running backs must dedicate some part of their focus on protecting the ball. It's called getting in their head. When a defense can do this the battle is won before the play begins. It's been a long time since I've seen an LSU defense lacking playmakers. With the talent they recruit, this should not be.
Meanwhile, at mission control, commander Les Miles must continues to search for a balanced football team. At long last his offense is playing lights out. Now he must count on the reliable defensive leader to get his boys home
Captain Chavis, can you hear me...
Captain Chavis??
Captain???
LSU '13 is in crisis.
There's not much time.
Grab some spare parts, make a defense.
Get them home.
Failure is not an option.
As LSU scrambles to come up with answers for their dismal defensive performance against Georgia, the cold truth is there may not be any, given the mass exodus of defensive starters form last year. Typically a John Chavis defense has players waiting in the wings for their turns to shine. Not this year. Since the second half of game two, Chavis' group has shown little signs of growth.
At first played off as youthful lack of focus after building a big lead, it's now feared the loss of starters is a bigger burden than once appeared. That youthful lack of focus has turned into mass confusion as the level of competition rises.
The consensus is that the lack of experience has been the major factor in the decline of the defense. That a lineup stacked with underclassman with little prior playing time is to much to overcome.
In the words of the great Lee Corso, "not so fast, my friend".
While it's true LSU has a number of new starters, it's really not much more than the usual attrition in todays college football landscape. Consider LSU. Since 2010 attrition has hit the defense hard. Five starters left after 2010, six after 2011. Of those five in '10 were Patrick Peterson, Drake Nevis and Kelvin Shepard. Among the losses in '11 were Michael Brockers and Brandon Taylor.
Each time attrition hit Chavis, the defense came back stronger. The 2011 defense replaced 2010 loaded with playmaking sophomores lead by a honey badger and a junior named Claiborne. It will go down as one of the finest defensive units in LSU history.
Which leads us to the 2012 defections. Mingo, Montgomery, Minter, Reid and Simon. Big losses no doubt, but replaced by players with ample enough playing time for a smooth transition. Remember, Eric Reid, Kevin Minter, Tharold Simon and Kiki Mingo all played sparingly in 2010. In their first season of fulltime play in 2011 two(Reid and Mingo)were all Americans and Minter was all SEC.
The 2013 LSU defense consist of five juniors, three seniors and three sophomores. It ain't all a lack of experience it's a lack of playmakers that has this unit clinging to it's football life. It's also a lack of depth, awareness and too many underperforming four and five star recruits. But the biggest thing is the lack of playmakers.
Playmakers change games and create momentum. They force fumbles, intercept passes and sack the quarterback. But most of all they create fear in their opponents. Coaches, quarterbacks, wide receivers and running backs must dedicate some part of their focus on protecting the ball. It's called getting in their head. When a defense can do this the battle is won before the play begins. It's been a long time since I've seen an LSU defense lacking playmakers. With the talent they recruit, this should not be.
Meanwhile, at mission control, commander Les Miles must continues to search for a balanced football team. At long last his offense is playing lights out. Now he must count on the reliable defensive leader to get his boys home
Captain Chavis, can you hear me...
Captain Chavis??
Captain???
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
O-Line Needs Time
If you are
in that number of growing of Saints fans and prognosticators worried about the
Saints offensive line, spare yourself the reflux, put the purple pill away and
stop.
No, I’m not
here to tell you the 2013 version of the Saints offensive line is not without
its problems. I am here to tell you, though, we’ve been here before.
The same
worries were present in the early part of the 2011 season. “Brees is getting hit too much.” “The O-line
is weak up the middle.” “The left tackle position needs help to keep Brees
clean.” “Where’s our running game!” “We got STUFFED on 4th and
goal!”
Then after
losing 2 of three games at the midway point of 2011, the Saints found
themselves a shakey 5-3, and the O-line was just dominated by the Rams defensive
line, losing 31-21 to a team that would go one to win only 2 games.
What happened
next? The Saints finished with an 8-0 run to a 13-3 record. Wins included a sweep of Atlanta, a 49-24 thumping
of eventual Super Bowl champion NY Giants and an outdoor road December win in the
cold, the wet and the mud. A Saint was the leading rusher of the game in six of
those final eight wins. Something they
could only do twice in the first eight games.
Did the
Saints make a trade?
No.
Cut someone?
No.
Bench somebody.
No.
Saints coach
Sean Payton and his staff figured it out. With the same personnel, the Saints
made the proper adjustments and started railroading teams, scoring 40+ points in
4 of the final six wins. While scoring 49, 42 and 45 points against the Giants,
Vikings and Panthers, the Saints’ Mark Ingram led all rushers with 80 yards,
Chris Ivory with 74 yards, and Ivory again with 127 yards respectively. This after being stopped cold on not one, not two, but three 4th and
inches in season opener at Green Bay.
Again, I’m
not saying the 2013 offensive line is without trouble. Brees IS getting hit too much. The holes for
the running backs ARE scarce. There HAVE been too many holding penalties. Too many redzone opportunities ARE producing three
points or less. We got STUFFED on 4th and goal!
All this and
the Saints are 3-0.
Offensive
lines need time to gel. There’s a new starter at left tackle, a new blocking tight
end and an injury to the cornerstone of the line, Jhari Evans. Brees has a couple of new receivers he’s
getting use to as well. Causing him to
hold the ball longer.
All this and
the Saints are outgaining their opponents 404 to 295 yards per game. Outscoring
them 23-12 per game. They are converting nearly 50% third downs. Brees is
hitting 68% of his passes. In fact, the Saints lead their opponent in all but
one offensive category.
The line
must be doing something right.
Now, the schedule
does get tougher. Defenses will get
stouter.
But my bet
is on Sean Payton. He will get the O-Line to gel. And judging by the stats now,
God help the NFL when they do.
Monday, September 16, 2013
Are Saints Fans Jaded?
Are Saints fans jaded?
Moments after the Saints thrilling victory over the Tampa
Bay Bucs, Facebook and Twitter blew up with Saints fans DISAPPOINTED in how the
Saints won the game, feeling bad about winning ugly. Yes there was the
obligatory “WE DAT!”s and “Geaux Saints” posts from the soccer mom diehards,
but the “boy we got away with one” or “we didn’t deserve that one” comments
outnumbered them.
Monday call in shows were worse, the general mood of callers
was of a Saints defeat. Some talk show hosts expressed their “concern” that
yes, while the Saints did win the game, their poor play left much to be desired.
Balderdash!
Let me get this straight. The Saints went into hostile
territory to play a division rival. A rival who a week earlier snatched defeat
from the jaws of victory. A rival who, in only week 2, had to call a “players
only” meeting feeling their backs, already, were against the wall. A rival so determined
not to go 0-2, discipline and sportsmanship was tossed aside.
And win?!
And we wonder why coaches get testy.
Sure, Drew Brees made a couple of poor decisions. OK, the OL
had its problems. And yes, Sean Payton
is obsessed with making a player out of Mark Ingram. But the Saints didn’t deserve to win?
Let’s take a trip down Saints memory lane.
In 1990, week one of the NFL season, the Saints played the back
to back Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers on Monday Night Football. The
Saints were on the cusp of victory. The incomparable Joe Montana was sacked six
times. Perennial all-pro RB Roger Craig
was held to 23 yards on 12 carries. The greatest NFL player of all time (as
elected by an NFL Network poll) Jerry Rice had a grand total of one catch for 6
yards. The Saints took a late 12-10 lead
on a Morten Anderson 32 yard FG. Know what happened next? That beaten down 49er offense of Montana and
Rice connected on a 3rd down 20 yard heartbreaker that turned a
would be desperation 58 yard FG prayer into a 38 yard chip shot game winner.
They made the necessary plays at the right time to win the game.
The 49ers finished that season 14-2, the Saints were 8-8. Do
you think the 49ers cared they squeaked by a highly motivated inferior opponent, early
in the season at their ballpark?
By all rights, the 49ers had no business winning that game.
By all rights, the Saints had every business winning the
Bucs game.
The Saints outgained Tampa in total yardage 371-273, held QB Josh
Freeman to 9/22 passing for 113 yards and a pic, a sack fumble and held the Bucs
scoreless defensively. But for those poor decisions by Brees and a Tampa goal
line stand, this was a Saints blowout.
Had the Saints lost this game, it would’ve been a giveaway.
The Saints inglorious past is littered with heartbreaking
defeat after heartbreaking defeat. Wins
that were seemingly in the bag, teams beaten, tantalizing, only to be ripped
away by a Hail Mary, a punt return or hyper-conservative coaching.
So come on, Saints fans, don’t be jaded. I, for one loved
that ugly victory over Tampa. I’d take 17 more just like it.
Monday, September 9, 2013
Quick Results for Kindred Spirits
Well that didn’t take long.
Sean Payton’s return to the sideline produced, for the most part, the
same result it has produced during the first six years of his tenure as Saints
head coach. That is an offense with a
sharpshooting QB producing a ton of yards and points.
After a sluggish first quarter, as Payton was finding his
sea legs, the Saints had their way with the Falcons defense, outscoring them 23-7.
Payton also showed growth as a play
caller. In the past, when the running game looked like it wasn’t working,
Payton would abandon it and turn the game over to Drew Brees. Not yesterday.
Payton was so determined to stick with the run; it may have prevented the
Saints form scoring two touchdowns from first and goal. Instead, they had to settle
for field goals. On each possession, Payton called first and goal running plays
to Mark Ingram. Both plays proved unsuccessful as Ingram once again displayed a
lack of NFL speed to the edge and power in close quarters. Payton stuck with
the run to the tune of 29 carries. Although only 78 yards were gained for a 2.7
yard average, Payton accomplished his goal of softening up the Falcons pass
rush and making their linebackers respect the running game enough to be susceptible
to play action.
There were some hiccups, though, but correctable. First, Payton
is making loyalty to a running back a new art form. Clearly Mark Ingram is not
an NFL running back, at least not in Payton’s system. Ingram is known as a bruising back requiring
multiple carries to wear down a defense. But with Payton, a running back gets
small doses of carries. Unless those carries produce, 4 yards or better, Payton
is on to something and/or someone else. I will, however, defend Ingram in this
respect, when he enters the game, every defensive player’s antennae goes
up. I don’t have the percentages but it
seems the Saints are much more likely to run when Ingram is in the game. Also the Saints lack that physical offensive
line Ingram needs to keep initial defenders off of him. Yet Payton keeps going to him time and time
again.
No bigger was this point made than one fourth and inches.
Payton rolled the dice. He installed Ingram into the lineup. Every Falcon’s player, coach, and fan in the
stands new Ingram was getting the ball. The result was a two yard loss and possession
turned over to the Falcons. Ingram was
given eight more carries in the game gaining a grand total of 11 yards. His
longest run was seven yards which means he gained only four yards on the other
attempts combined. Now I’m not great in math, but that average can’t be good.
Payton has become patient, but not that patient!
Second, the Saints must score touchdowns in first and goal
opportunities. This game would not have been close had they accomplished this.
Having to settle for field goals in those situations constitutes a win for the
opponent’s defense and is deflating to your team. Even if the Saints converted
just one of those chances the last Falcons’ drive would have taken on a
different tone.
Maybe I’m just second guessing, but burning your second timeout
on fourth and one from their three yard line with about three minutes to go is a
waste. By Payton decided to try the old “draw them offside” routine anyway, he
loses a timeout he may need later. In fact, I’m all for going for it in that
spot. Hey, you score a touchdown,
convert a first down or pin Atlanta down inside their five yard line. It’s a
win win win. Instead, you burn perhaps a much needed timeout, still up by only
one possession, give up 18 yards field position and most importantly, now
Atlanta’s to drive is for a touchdown to beat you instead of a field goal to
tie and send into overtime. I know it a
philosophical decision, but I’d rather a team laying up with a wedge for a
field goal to tie than pulling that 3 wood out and going for the win.
It didn’t take long for Rob Ryan’s new look defense to
produce. Saints fans haven’t seen that type pressure since former defensive
coordinator Greg Williams was paying coin for it. Again,
after the first quarter, once Ryan got a beat on what the Falcons were trying
to do, he slammed the door shut. As for getting a heavy dose of Stephen Jackson
punishing the Saints defense into submission, as predicted, Ryan had
his men ready. Outside Jackson’s 50 yard run, he was a non-factor. On ten other
carries he gained only 27 yards and dropped the potential game winning
touchdown. Matt Ryan was forced to
attempt 38 passes. He was sacked three times and harassed the entire day. One report stated he was hit total of 23
times. Talk about remember me shots!
All in all it was a nice return for Sean Payton and debut
for Rob Ryan. From Payton and New Orleans icon Steve Gleason dropping the who
dat chant to Roman Harper’s interception on the game’s final meaningful play,
these two kindred spirits, both on a mission to right the wrongs they were
dealt, accomplished step one. Here’s hoping the ride has only just begun.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Desperately Seeking Defense
In the wake of the worst NFL defensive performance in the history of mankind, one wouldn't be surprised if a message appeared in the NFL personals. "Deparately seeking defense. Meet me at Saints Drive. Keep the faith. Love, Sean"
When Saints HC Sean Payton returned from his year long abeyance, he wanted to send a message. In less time than it took Doug Thorton to get the Super Bowl relit, he fired DC Steve Spagnuolo and DB coach Ken Fajole. If this didn't get the attention of the remaining defensive impersonators, Payton hired NFL mercenary Rob Ryan to take over.
Next message, the axe. First on the list, DT Sedrick Ellis. The underwhelming top ten draft pick was told he was not in Payton's plans. Ellis joins other Saints first round DL disasters such as Jonathon Sulllivan and Shawn Knight. To be fair, Ellis had his chance. The Saints brought in DT after DT to compliment him to no avail. Also released, CB Johnny Patrick. When the former third round pick from Louisville wasn't getting iced in the tub, he was getting burned on the field. Validating Payton's move on Patrick was San Diego scooping him up within a week. The Chargers are the NFL's Nicki Minaj at judging talent. "I tink you awe awlreddy a soopastawr", said Minaj to a jerseylicious, tone-deaf, cross-dressing American Idol wantabe. Also, safeties Dawan Landry(JAX) and Adrian Wilson(ARZ) are now available free agents, safeties who play well against the run and pass(imagine that). Roman Harper may want to start thinking about his second career.
Message three, "you didn't earn that". Broderick Bunkley, David Hawthorne and Curtis Loften have already agreed to new terms of their contracts. Surely Will Smith and Jon Vilma will be next. In fact, anyone not named Cameron Jordan should be holding off plans to build that new house.
If there was ever a season the Saints have to make a splash in free agency, this is it. With the offense still hummimg, the Saints, it would seem, should be an attractive destination. Good luck with that. Most of the impact UFA's have been franchised. The Saints will have to reach for proven veterans on their way out or younger overshadowed veterans on their way up. That formula worked in 2009 when Darren Sharper worked his magic. Not so much in 2012 when David Hawthorne was injured most of the year. DL's John Abraham(ATL) and Jason Jones(SEA), LB's James Harrison(PIT) and Paul Kruger(BAL) and DB's Sean Smith(MIA),Wilson and Landry are names to watch.
Finally, help must arrive via the draft. With only five picks, the Saints have to be better on draft weekend then they have been recently. Luckily, at the fifteenth position, impact palyers are projected to be there for the taking. Mock drafts have either one or all of the following, LB's Barkivious Mingo(LSU) or Jarvis Jones(UGA), and DT Star Lotulelei(Utah) available at fifteen. All are physically talented but have queston marks with Jones' spinal stenosous the most concern. Some scouts feel there's value in the late first round so trading down and picking up a second round pick is also a possibility.
Now other NFL teams are on the move, San Francisco and Seattle are legit. The Vikings and Rams look to be on the cusp. Carolina owned the Saints last season while the Falcons had the best record in football. With an offense so good the Saints won seven games despite having the worst NFL defense ever. By comparison, in 1980 the defense was horrid, not the worst ever, but awful. That team won only one game. This puts the Saints in a precarious position. That proverbial window wil not be open long. That's why Payton is seeking defense. Desperately.
When Saints HC Sean Payton returned from his year long abeyance, he wanted to send a message. In less time than it took Doug Thorton to get the Super Bowl relit, he fired DC Steve Spagnuolo and DB coach Ken Fajole. If this didn't get the attention of the remaining defensive impersonators, Payton hired NFL mercenary Rob Ryan to take over.
Next message, the axe. First on the list, DT Sedrick Ellis. The underwhelming top ten draft pick was told he was not in Payton's plans. Ellis joins other Saints first round DL disasters such as Jonathon Sulllivan and Shawn Knight. To be fair, Ellis had his chance. The Saints brought in DT after DT to compliment him to no avail. Also released, CB Johnny Patrick. When the former third round pick from Louisville wasn't getting iced in the tub, he was getting burned on the field. Validating Payton's move on Patrick was San Diego scooping him up within a week. The Chargers are the NFL's Nicki Minaj at judging talent. "I tink you awe awlreddy a soopastawr", said Minaj to a jerseylicious, tone-deaf, cross-dressing American Idol wantabe. Also, safeties Dawan Landry(JAX) and Adrian Wilson(ARZ) are now available free agents, safeties who play well against the run and pass(imagine that). Roman Harper may want to start thinking about his second career.
Message three, "you didn't earn that". Broderick Bunkley, David Hawthorne and Curtis Loften have already agreed to new terms of their contracts. Surely Will Smith and Jon Vilma will be next. In fact, anyone not named Cameron Jordan should be holding off plans to build that new house.
If there was ever a season the Saints have to make a splash in free agency, this is it. With the offense still hummimg, the Saints, it would seem, should be an attractive destination. Good luck with that. Most of the impact UFA's have been franchised. The Saints will have to reach for proven veterans on their way out or younger overshadowed veterans on their way up. That formula worked in 2009 when Darren Sharper worked his magic. Not so much in 2012 when David Hawthorne was injured most of the year. DL's John Abraham(ATL) and Jason Jones(SEA), LB's James Harrison(PIT) and Paul Kruger(BAL) and DB's Sean Smith(MIA),Wilson and Landry are names to watch.
Finally, help must arrive via the draft. With only five picks, the Saints have to be better on draft weekend then they have been recently. Luckily, at the fifteenth position, impact palyers are projected to be there for the taking. Mock drafts have either one or all of the following, LB's Barkivious Mingo(LSU) or Jarvis Jones(UGA), and DT Star Lotulelei(Utah) available at fifteen. All are physically talented but have queston marks with Jones' spinal stenosous the most concern. Some scouts feel there's value in the late first round so trading down and picking up a second round pick is also a possibility.
Now other NFL teams are on the move, San Francisco and Seattle are legit. The Vikings and Rams look to be on the cusp. Carolina owned the Saints last season while the Falcons had the best record in football. With an offense so good the Saints won seven games despite having the worst NFL defense ever. By comparison, in 1980 the defense was horrid, not the worst ever, but awful. That team won only one game. This puts the Saints in a precarious position. That proverbial window wil not be open long. That's why Payton is seeking defense. Desperately.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
LSU Needed a Coach Not a Mad Hatter
Still reeling from the LSU loss to Alabama in Death Valley, I can't shake the feeling that the better team lost. I'm not talking about the old cliche meaning the team that played better in the game that night. I'm mean the better team overall.
LSU was about 90 seconds from exposing Alabama for what they are. An overhyped team that's good but nowhere near deserving of the media genuflecting they have received this season. I said last Friday on my weekly spot with 690am's Eric Asher that if LSU gives QB Zach Mettenberger time, bama's secondary is vunerable. They did. They were. If only Les Miles could see it.
If he could, he would have seen that bama's secondary was no match for LSU. Mettenberger and his WR's were schooling them. Converting third down after third down, bama had no answer. Not even close. Saban was desponded. So when LSU drove inside bama's 25 yard line twice in the 4th quarter by third down passing, instead of forcing an exhausted bama defense whose pass rush had disappeared and DB's were gassed to continue to chase, Miles let them off the hook. LSU never attempted at least one pass in either sets of those downs. Miles truned to the runnng game and played into the hands of bama' strength. Even trying to convert a 4th down by astonishingly taking the very player who had him poised for victory off the field. Lining up in a formation so obvious a jumbotron message announcing the play would've been less conspicuous.
The problem with LSU was their head football coach believed the media's version of 2012 bama. He seemed to think that was the BCS version of bama in Tiger Stadium Saturday night. Miles thougt the Mad Hatter was needed when really, LSU only needed a coach. Someone who trusted what he was seeing. A QB growing up in front of his very eyes. The whole world saw it. Miles didn't.
Miles defenders always point to his won/loss record. They point out his near 80% winnig percentage. They will say he had his team posied to beat the best team in the country. In truth, he continues to make questionable decisions each week. Decisions that unnecessarily get in the way of success. Decisions that make easy wins a struggle. Decisions his players must work much harder to overcome.
Decision 1. Fake FG on 4th and 12. Fail.
Decision 2. 54 yard filed goal attempt from a kicker whose career long is 44 yards. Les, that's ten yards futher than the very best your kicker has ever done. Bama takes the short field and drives to a TD just before halftime. Fail.
Decision 3. Fourth and 1. To go or not to go. Either choice is fine. The play called wasn't. Fail.
Decision 4. No attempt to score TD on the final possession. Result is missed FG and bama allowed off the mat to survive an eight count. Fail.
That fourth down play was vintage Miles. Fourth and one. Late in 4th quarter. You're up a field goal. Another FG puts you up a touchdown. A first down allows the clock to bleed and solidify the legend of Saturday night in Death Valley. Miles is brain frozen. Finally with the playclock winding down and his QB pleading for a decision. Field goal or go for it? Coach, we need a decision. Finally, in haste, Miles sends in short yardage personell. A RB lines up as QB. Not in the wildcat, but under center. Everyone bunched in. The play? QB sneak. Can be seen from Pluto. Hurried! Playclock winding down! 3,2,1...FAIL. So Miles takes his hot hand 6"6" 230lb QB to insert a 5'9" 215 lb RB to run a QB sneak to gain one yard.
Sadly, Miles went to the mad hatter on that play and thruout the game. LSU was the better team. Miles just didn't belive it.
LSU was about 90 seconds from exposing Alabama for what they are. An overhyped team that's good but nowhere near deserving of the media genuflecting they have received this season. I said last Friday on my weekly spot with 690am's Eric Asher that if LSU gives QB Zach Mettenberger time, bama's secondary is vunerable. They did. They were. If only Les Miles could see it.
If he could, he would have seen that bama's secondary was no match for LSU. Mettenberger and his WR's were schooling them. Converting third down after third down, bama had no answer. Not even close. Saban was desponded. So when LSU drove inside bama's 25 yard line twice in the 4th quarter by third down passing, instead of forcing an exhausted bama defense whose pass rush had disappeared and DB's were gassed to continue to chase, Miles let them off the hook. LSU never attempted at least one pass in either sets of those downs. Miles truned to the runnng game and played into the hands of bama' strength. Even trying to convert a 4th down by astonishingly taking the very player who had him poised for victory off the field. Lining up in a formation so obvious a jumbotron message announcing the play would've been less conspicuous.
The problem with LSU was their head football coach believed the media's version of 2012 bama. He seemed to think that was the BCS version of bama in Tiger Stadium Saturday night. Miles thougt the Mad Hatter was needed when really, LSU only needed a coach. Someone who trusted what he was seeing. A QB growing up in front of his very eyes. The whole world saw it. Miles didn't.
Miles defenders always point to his won/loss record. They point out his near 80% winnig percentage. They will say he had his team posied to beat the best team in the country. In truth, he continues to make questionable decisions each week. Decisions that unnecessarily get in the way of success. Decisions that make easy wins a struggle. Decisions his players must work much harder to overcome.
Decision 1. Fake FG on 4th and 12. Fail.
Decision 2. 54 yard filed goal attempt from a kicker whose career long is 44 yards. Les, that's ten yards futher than the very best your kicker has ever done. Bama takes the short field and drives to a TD just before halftime. Fail.
Decision 3. Fourth and 1. To go or not to go. Either choice is fine. The play called wasn't. Fail.
Decision 4. No attempt to score TD on the final possession. Result is missed FG and bama allowed off the mat to survive an eight count. Fail.
That fourth down play was vintage Miles. Fourth and one. Late in 4th quarter. You're up a field goal. Another FG puts you up a touchdown. A first down allows the clock to bleed and solidify the legend of Saturday night in Death Valley. Miles is brain frozen. Finally with the playclock winding down and his QB pleading for a decision. Field goal or go for it? Coach, we need a decision. Finally, in haste, Miles sends in short yardage personell. A RB lines up as QB. Not in the wildcat, but under center. Everyone bunched in. The play? QB sneak. Can be seen from Pluto. Hurried! Playclock winding down! 3,2,1...FAIL. So Miles takes his hot hand 6"6" 230lb QB to insert a 5'9" 215 lb RB to run a QB sneak to gain one yard.
Sadly, Miles went to the mad hatter on that play and thruout the game. LSU was the better team. Miles just didn't belive it.
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