Archive for July, 2012

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It Should’ve Been Utah

July 26, 2012

Last week it was announced that BYU and Wisconsin had finally gotten around to making an announcement about playing each other, and Wisconsin was added to an already tough 2013 season for BYU.

This was great news! It meant that one of the ‘big boys’ was willing to play BYU. Not only that, they were willing to do so on an equal, home and home type deal.

Speculation was that the game would land in September, but then something miraculous happened.

Wisconsin actually had a Big Ten conference game against Purdue moved to September so the Badgers could play BYU in November.

Read that again.

Bret Bielema and the Wisconsin Badgers felt like adding BYU to the schedule was a big enough priority that they actually went so far as to move a conference game with Purdue to make it happen. This is huge. It took a strong desire on the part of Wisconsin, and the cooperation of both the Big Ten and Purdue.

This is really great news, but something’s been bugging me about it since I heard the story break: it should have been done for BYU earlier, and it should have been Utah doing it.

Utah should have been the first member of one of the big 5 conferences to work out a deal to play BYU in November. It should’ve been Utah requesting that the Pac12 allow a conference game be moved to September to preserve the Holy War in November. It should’ve been Utah asking a fellow conference member to switch that game with them. It should’ve been Utah asking for an exception to the Pac12 non-conference scheduling rule. But it wasn’t.

I’ll be the first to admit that we don’t know what closed-door conversations have gone on between Chris Hill and Larry Scott. For all we know, this was already attempted by Utah, and they were turned down. After all, they’re new to the Pac12, and they probably don’t have the sway with the Pac12 that Wisconsin has with the Big Ten.

Maybe I’m wrong here. Utah did recently announce two more games with BYU (2013 and 2016), and that’s certainly a move toward continuance. But are we stuck in September because Utah isn’t pushing hard enough? Wisconsin tells me yes, but again, all we have to go on is what we observe. Actions speak to our priorities, and Wisconsin has made BYU a high priority.

Perhaps it’s because I really do love playing Utah that I care so much. Maybe it’s because I still feel strong ties to them, and I’d rather not see them go away. I’m really excited about playing Wisconsin, and I’m not saying I’d prefer to schedule Utah instead of them, but it’s weird to have a school with so few ties to BYU be the one that made scheduling BYU such a high priority.

It should’ve been Utah. At the very least, it should’ve been Utah first.

For more on the Wisconsin series, see my article for Examiner.com here.

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Cougars Should Wear Blue

July 20, 2012

Playing on the road in college football can be very intimidating. The degree to which any particular game becomes intimidating to the visiting team is based on several factors. These are things like: how good the other team currently is, how rabid their fans are, if it’s a school and stadium with a significant college football pedigree, and if the game may affect your post-season.

Almost all of those things are predetermined, either historically, or at least the week before the game. The one variable that really can be changed or controlled at gametime is the role of the fan.

What is a fan? Most agree that it’s short for fanatic: a person with an extreme and uncritical enthusiasm or zeal. Think about when a stadium is just full of people, and when it is is truly full of fans. What’s the difference? EXTREME enthusiasm. A stadium of people at a football game may be indifferent to what’s happening on the field. The person simply shows up, maybe late, finds their seat, and passes the time through chit-chat, texting, or knitting. A fan shows up before kickoff – they’ve probably even been tailgating before-hand. The fan is involved in the action on the field; more than just a spectator, the fan is a participant. The fan knows that he or she can be a factor in the game. The fan stands. The fan is loud. The fan wears the team’s color.

As the visiting team enters the field, they should be greeted by the loudest sea of unified color that they’ve ever experienced. It should make them weak in the knees and wish that they were playing at home instead. How striking is it when you enter a stadium like Sanford Stadium at The University of Georgia? The sea of red swallows you whole, as a testament to the fact that the Bulldogs are ready to do the same.

When visiting teams come to Lavell Edwards Stadium, how do they feel when they enter and see a sight like this? Granted, this may not be at the opening kickoff, but does it matter? There are two glaring problems in the picture. First, there is a huge section of fans missing, in the middle of the stadium! This should be the heart of the fanatic frenzy! There is so little interest apparent in the stands that some spectators might be surprised to find out there’s a game going on.

The second issue is the color, or lack thereof. Sure, navy blue doesn’t stand out as much as royal, but there isn’t enough color anywhere to say one team or another is being supported by the fans. Fans should wear their team colors. BYU fans should wear blue. This diagram shows what the stadium should look like on gameday. Sure, there’s now way to be as solid blue as that, but certainly we can and should do better.

Lavell Edwards Stadium - Blue Out

Doesn’t that look great? Combine the blue from the fans with the blue in the endzones and around the Y, and you’ve got something opposing teams will notice. The color in the stands and the loudness of the fans should shock them.

Once you’ve mastered a single color in the stadium, you can move on to a more advanced color scheme. Other stadiums, like Kinnick Stadium of the Iowa Hawkeyes, Bronco Stadium of Boise State, occasionally assign fans colors to wear according to the section they’re sitting in, and they do it! The alternating colors demonstrates further unity of the fans to the team because you see they’re willing to support the team, even if they’re in a section that isn’t their favorite color. The team is more important to them than that. The game means everything to them at that moment. If we as BYU fans can ever master wearing blue, we might be able to try alternating blue and white sections, like this:

Lavell Edwards Stadium - Blue/White

The point isn’t to get crazy with colors. It is to show visiting teams that not only is the home team there to crush you, but that there are 65,000+ rabid fans in the stands eager to watch it happen. The fans should be unified with team, and together they can create the kind of intimidation that makes men weak in the knees. I know we’re a long way out, as we have enough trouble getting fans to stay, stand, and wear one color – so for now, let’s just make sure that all Cougars everywhere know that they’re assigned to the BLUE section, that they’re expected to show up early, to be an important part of the game, and to stay through the end.

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All Season in a Game

July 18, 2012

Riley Nelson

The offseason is killer, and I don’t know if the daily countdown helps or not, but there are 43 days left until college football, and more importantly, until BYU football kicks off. To make it through, I’ve been using BYUtv and watching some great old BYU football games.  Today I watched the Utah State game from last year, and I decided that it tells the story of the entire BYU season. Few analogies are perfect, and neither is this one, but it’s a pretty close match.

Pregame:

Game: Things started out well enough, we won the toss!

Season: We also won the game at Ole Miss, which could have gone either way, if it weren’t for the heroics of Kyle Van Noy, who made sure that this toss-up came down clearly in favor of the Cougars.

Quarter 1

Game: In the first play from scrimmage, Robert Turbin reeled off an 80 yard run for a touchdown. Talk about a stake through the heart. This came against a defense typically strong against the run. A defense with guys capable of pursuing and decimating a ball carrier. But the Aggies, and Turbin, killed us on that play.

Season: We gave up a late lead at Texas, and ended up losing by a point. AND we lost 54-10 to Utah at home.

Quarter 2

Game: We follow up with ten points on the next two drives to take an early lead! Utah State responds with another touchdown and we add a field goal. Trailing by a point at the half, and wondering how we’re losing to the Aggies.

Season: We follow up the loss to the Utes by beating Central Florida. Heaps struggled in passing, completing only 16/34 attempts, at 3.9 yards per attempt. The difference in the game? A 93 yard kickoff return for a touchdown by Cody Hoffman. The Cougars beat the Knights despite being outgained offensively, 399 yards to 260 yards.

Halftime

Game: By the middle of the third quarter, Utah State had extended its lead to 8 points, with a score of 21-13. Five consecutive drives for the Cougars (reaching back to the 2nd quarter) netted only 3 points, and during the same span that the Aggies amassed 14, so Riley Nelson was put into the game to relieve Jake Heaps.

Season: Jake Heaps had been declining consistently since a decent game against Ole Miss. In that game Jake posted a completion percentage of 63.2. Over the next four games, that number would continually drop: 57.9, 54, 47.1, 44. It’s not the only relevant stat, but it’s probably the most telling, and the one that most directly illustrates the increasing frustration of decreased performance as losses began to add up. When it became apparent that with Heaps in the game, a loss to Utah State was inevitable, Riley Nelson was brought in the end of the third quarter, in hopes that he would provide a spark.

Quarter 3

Game: Riley Nelson indeed sparked the Cougar offense, guiding the Cougars in their longest drive of the half, 36 yards, to set up what would be a failed FG. On the subsequent drive, Nelson connected with Hoffman on a 24 yard touchdown pass, cutting the Aggie lead to just 4. The subsequent Utah State drive stalled after 55 yards, and resulted in a turnover on downs. The Cougar running game then came alive under DiLuigi, as he contributed a few good runs to a 42 yard drive that seemed destined to be the game-winner. But DiLuigi fumbled, and it was recovered by the Aggies.

Season: Riley sparked the team to come back and win the game against Utah State in dramatic fashion. The Cougars followed up with wins against San Jose State, Oregon State, and Idaho State. But they ran into trouble against TCU, where special teams gaffes ensured a Horned Frog win.

Quarter 4

Game: The defense came up big when it needed to, holding the Aggies to just 1 yard on their next possession, and getting the Cougars the ball for one more drive. Riley Nelson led the Cougars 96 yards in just over 2 minutes to get the game winning touchdown with a mere 11 seconds remaining.

Season: The Cougars rounded out the season with wins over Idaho, New Mexico State, and Hawaii, making football look easy. They ended the season, and their bowl game against Tulsa in dramatic fashion, with Riley Nelson leading the offense, down by 4 with just over four minutes remaining. The drive ended on a touchdown pass to Cody Hoffman with a mere 11 seconds remaining.

Postgame Celebration

The game ended in a win, and the season was a good, winning season because of the incredible turnaround of the team, led by the one and only Riley Nelson.

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Why Utah and Chris Hill Deserve a Break

July 14, 2012

The Holy War

I can’t tell you how many articles I’ve read this week about the Holy War, but I can tell you I’ve been disappointed with the content of nearly all of them. The major media outlets and most of the blogs are full of angry words pointed at the evil Utes who have canceled the Holy War, the Utes that are too good for BYU now that they’re in the Pac 12, the Utes who want BYU to know that they are so much better than the Cougars that they will not even consider playing them anymore unless it’s 2 for 1. These Utes are led by their evil AD, Chris Hill, who is obviously responsible for everything from global warming to socks with sandals, taking BYU’s spot in the Pac 12 and now, killing the Holy War.

Just stop it. You sound ridiculous.

Let’s rewind the clock one week. At that time, the final game between Utah and BYU was scheduled for September 15th of this year. As BYU fans, we’ve become familiar with how far out scheduling really needs to be done to be comfortable and effective. For all intents and purposes, there certainly was not the expectation of a Holy War game in 2013. Sure, most of us were still hoping it would be announced, but here we are in July 2012, and still there was not a single game scheduled after this season.

Then July 10th rolls around, and what happened? Chris Hill announces two future games with the Cougars, the first being next year, and in Provo no less. The return game though, was set for 2016. If you’re no good at math, I’ll help you out – that leaves a two year gap, which has nearly everyone in BYU media and fandom freaking out.

What just happened here? A series that was going to be dead after this September suddenly received a two game extension, and we’re focusing on two years that weren’t scheduled?

Let’s not assume that just because we don’t have dates for 2014 and 2015 that that means we are not going to play those years. Yes, Utah did schedule Michigan during that two year stretch, but that doesn’t preclude a series with the Cougars. In fact, even with the Pac 12 restriction on non-conference scheduling, BYU and Utah have two weeks each in 2014 and 2015 that are open together. In 2014 they could play on August 30th and September 13th, and in 2015 they could play on September 19th or 26th. Utah’s only non-conference opponent in these years so far is Michigan, but the Cougars have Texas and Houston in September of 2013 and Nebraska and Boise State in September of 2014. Sure it makes a sucky September for the Cougars in both years, but apparently that’s part of being independent, at least for now.

So what’s up with those two years? Sure, maybe Chris Hill hates BYU and wants to flip them the proverbial bird…but that doesn’t make much sense. Most fans I know on both sides of the game see it as big, important, and worth continuing. Just as Utah is BYU’s favorite team to beat, Utah enjoys kicking the snot out of us more than anyone else.

Another idea that has been suggested is that Utah was holding off on scheduling the Holy War in 2014 and 2015 because of the now failed Big Ten-Pac 12 scheduling agreement. If that’s the case, we should be able to expect another BYU-Utah scheduling announcement any day now.

It may even be that, with their new, daunting Pac 12 schedule, that the Utes simply cannot handle playing a high quality team like BYU year in and year out. Add in Michigan, and the schedule would become downright suicidal. But is Utah really afraid of playing BYU? In the last ten years they are 7-3 against BYU, and let’s not forget the 54-10 massacre from last year. Sure, it was a fluke, a statistical outlier, a game where BYU gifted the Utes 28 nearly automatic points. But it happened, and it’s not the type of game that strikes fear in the hearts of opponents.

Here’s an idea. What if Utah is actually working to petition the Pac 12 to give the BYU game an exception to the non-conference rule, allowing it to be played in November? It’s possible that the Pac 12 is reconsidering this theoretical petition by Utah in light of the failure of the Big Ten scheduling agreement. But why not just schedule those games in September? Maybe, just maybe it’s to help BYU. Look at their Septembers those years: Texas and Houston, Nebraska and Boise. Do you really want Utah thrown in there if you’re BYU? Perhaps Utah is fighting to get future BYU games in November.

In the end, we really don’t know what’s going on, and we won’t until both teams have fully announced their schedules for 2014 and 2015. What we do know is this: Chris Hill is just as likely to be fighting to save the Holy War as he is to be trying to kill it. So let’s give him and Utah a break until those schedules are actually full. Because to be honest, the way much of Cougar nation has responded to this 2 game scheduling announcement has been downright childish, and I wouldn’t blame Chris Hill or Utah for wanting to play someone a bit less whiny.

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