Posts Tagged ‘tcu’

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TCU 38, BYU 28

November 7, 2011

I had hoped that returning to Dallas Cowboy’s Stadium would bring back some of the magic that was around for the Oklahoma game in 2009. Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case. The Horned Frogs capitalized on three Cougar punts-but-not-punts to put up 21 points on short fields, en route to a 38-28 victory. I, like you, am baffled by the severity and quantity of punting errors, but I am also happy by the way our team played. For the first time in four years, our team was actually in this game.

How *not* to punt.

Keys to the game

Nelson. Riley threw for 215 yards and a touchdown, while rushing for an additional 84 yards. He threw two interceptions as well. One of which was tipped by his receiver into the hands of a Horned Frog in the endzone. The other was a comical throw-it-up-in-the-air-as-you’re-falling gaffe that was a horrible decision. Despite that notable lack of judgement, I felt that Riley played a good game, and he was not, in fact, shut down by the TCU defense, as many feared he would be.

Receivers. There was only one passing touchdown, and that went to RB Michael Alisa. Hoffman, Apo, and Falslev led the pack with 67, 42, and 35 receiving yards each.

The Rush Attack. The Horned Frogs evidently had prepared for Michael Alisa, as he was only able to muster 11 yards on 6 carries. The only effective runners were DiLuigi (69 yards) and Nelson (84).

Special Teams. Unbelievable. For the first time in years, the Horned Frogs were a low enough caliber team to be beaten, and BYU actually played well enough to win. The bright spot was JD Falslev returning a punt 67 yards for a touchdown. That bright spot was overshadowed by the three bad punt snaps – two that led to no kick, and one that led to a partially blocked kick. Giving TCU 21 easy points in a 10 point game is no way to win.

Bronco D. The total yards and first down totals put up by TCU is misleading, because they nearly always had a short field, courtesy of the BYU punt team. The best stat for the Cougar defense was that TCU was only 5/14 on third downs. It’s hard to say if BYU could have kept the Horned Frogs off the scoreboard if the punts had been full length…in the end it doesn’t matter.

What we know about TCU (7-2, 4-0 MWC)

After beating BYU, the Horned Frogs went on to beat Wyoming, and will take a four game winning streak with them on the road next week as they take on #5 Boise State. This game will determine the MWC championship, and also will go a long way to determining who the Non-AQ BCS buster will be this year. If it’s not Boise State, Houston (9-0) may be another candidate. TCU will be moving on to bigger and better things next season as they begin play in the Big 12.

What we know about BYU (6-3)

If BYU went into the TCU game looking for an identity, they came out of it with one similar to what they had after the Utah game, with more comedy reel than highlight reel material. After having a week off, the Cougars will host the Idaho Vandals on Saturday November 12th. They wrap up the season with New Mexico State and Hawaii. Win all of those and the Armed Forces Bowl, and this team can still win ten games this year.

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Week 9 Preview – BYU @ TCU

October 28, 2011

The Cougars and Horned Frogs each had a tune-up game last week, with TCU clobbering New Mexico, and BYU thumping Idaho State.  The teams have played each other the last six years as members of the MWC, and TCU holds a 4-2 lead in the series since 2005. These teams will have a grand stage tonight at the Cowboys Stadium in Dallas. BYU fans will remember that as the place where their Cougars upset then #3 Oklahoma back in 2009.

What we know about TCU (5-2, 3-0 MWC)

TCU isn’t used to losing. After going 7-5 in 2007, the Horned Frogs went 11-2 in 2008, with their only losses coming to #2 Oklahoma and #8 Utah. In 2009, the Frogs were 12-1, their only loss being in the Fiesta Bowl to Boise State. Last year they went undefeated, capping an amazing regular season with a Rose bowl win against #5 Wisconsin. 2011 began with a surprise loss to Baylor, and later, an OT loss to SMU. What’s different about the Frogs this year? They returned only 2 starters on offense and 4 on defense from last year’s team. And the stats are telling. TCU led the nation in total defense (yards) in each of the last three seasons. #1. This year, they are currently 37th in that ranking, behind who? #34 BYU. The Horned Frogs are giving up an average of 347 yards per game, where last year that number was just 228. The Frogs led the nation last year in scoring defense as well, only allowing 12 points per game. this year? 21.9 – same as BYU. Don’t get cocky, these guys will still put up a lot of points, but they are not the same team they have been the last few years.

What we know about BYU (6-2)

BYU needs to win this game. This is the last non-WAC opponent on the Cougars’ schedule this year. It’s a big game, played in a big venue. This may be the only chance the Cougars have to prove just how much they have improved, and to show that they can perform well against more than just the league’s bottom feeders. BYU has looked great since Riley Nelson stepped in and took over the starting QB job during the Utah State game. Tonight’s game will show us just how good they really are.

Keys to the game

Nelson. Riley, when asked the difference between last year and this year, said that a lot of it has to do with his approach to the game. He was trying to force everything, trying to make every throw be the perfect one. This year, he says he has learned to trust his reads, and to allow his teammates to make plays. I would add that he makes smart decisions with the ball most of the time. The players and coaches believe in him, but most importantly, he believes too. The Horned Frogs will key on him for sure, and they may break up some plays. In my opinion though, that is where Riley has been at his best this year. When a play is broken, he recognizes it and escapes to rush or throw for a first down. I haven’t seen a BYU QB in recent history that is as elusive as he has been lately – and if there is a big loss on a play, Riley finds a way to get it back the next play. TCU may have planned for the set plays, but you can’t plan for the plays Riley creates when he’s thinking on his feet.

Receivers. The receivers have responded to Riley in an amazing way. There are always 8-10 guys in each game getting receptions and making big gains and touchdowns. Cody Hoffman has been showing us more of the stuff he did in the New Mexico Bowl last season. He has been so clutch on third down and in the endzone – making some amazing catches. When a play is broken, the receivers have done a good job of breaking their routes and getting open, and when they’re not receiving the ball, they are throwing good blocks for their teammates.

The Rush Attack. Mike Alisa was once again the rushing leader for the team against Idaho State, averaging more than 8 yards per carry on 8 carries. The only higher average was that of Nelson, who averaged nearly 9 yards per carry. BYU really spread the rushes around last week, with Quezada and DiLuigi also contributing significantly to the rushing yards total. All four of those guys had a rushing touchdown in the game as well. The best part about having so many capable runners? There is always somebody fresh to run against what is usually a stingy rushing defense.

Special Teams. Special teams determine field position, and field position wins close games. If the Cougars win today, I think it will be a close game. In big games, you hope that your special teams come up with something big. Time for another Hoffman kickoff return for TD.

Bronco D. More than anything, I think the BroncoD has to be happy to not be facing Andy Dalton again. Sure GPat will still be on the sidelines, with his visor and sweat towel girl, but Dalton was a red-headed menace that had the Cougars’ number the last three years. But, unlike the defense, the offense hasn’t had quite the drop-off this year. The Horned Frogs are still averaging nearly 44 points per game, good enough for 8th in the nation. They are averaging 234 yards passing and 217 yards rushing. That rushing total will be lower against the Cougars, and their quarterback will be forced to make plays with his arm. In the Horned Frogs wins, Pachall only has around 22 attempts, in the losses, he had around 40. Forcing the Frogs to pass is the only way BYU will beat them. Their QB is no slouch, but putting the game on the shoulders of the sophomore worked for Baylor and SMU.

Prediction

The Horned Frogs and Cougars have similar records, but the Frogs’ wins have been more impressive. And when they’ve lost, it’s been close. I’m not the only BYU fan hoping that Dallas Cowboys’ Stadium still has some magic left for the Cougars. This is as good a shot as the Cougars have had in this game for a few years, but I think TCU will win narrowly, defeating the Cougars 34-31.

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Conference Realignment: Who’s next?

August 3, 2011

There is a lot of talk out there about conference realignment. New rumors are passed around every day about which school is unhappy and might flee to greener pastures. The rumor-mill is a popular place though – we’re all listening closely- because we’re all dying to know…Who’s next?

It’s helpful to look at conference realignment/expansion in terms of a chess match. In chess, your strategy should be created based on the imbalances of the particular game you’re playing. For example, you could have a material imbalance (you’re ahead or behind in points), or a space imbalance (you or your opponent controls more of the board). The imbalances dictate your strategy, and allow you to see how the game should be played out.

As we look at the college football landscape, we can see the effect that imbalances have had already.

The greatest imbalance of late has been that the SEC is the undisputed king of college football. Five straight national championships belong to SEC teams. Obviously, other conferences have tried to produce contenders in that time, but they have come up short. There is an imbalance. So the weak will grab for power.

The top conferences last year, according to Mark Schlabach, were (BCS in bold):

  1. SEC
  2. Big 10
  3. Big 12
  4. Pac 10
  5. ACC
  6. Big East
  7. MWC
  8. WAC

The Shifting Imbalances

Since the article was published shortly before the majority of realignment began, it’s a helpful starting point.

When Nebraska shifted to the Big 10, what happened? You take a strong team from the (yes, assumed) third best conference, and add it to the second best. There is now a greater gap, or imbalance between them.

The biggest player in conference expansion has been the Pac 10/12. Why? Do you remember all of those USC championships a few years ago? Yeah, it’s been awhile. And no self-respecting BCS conference is going to settle for being 4th best. So Larry Scott sees the imbalance and finds a potential weakness in his opponent. If he managed to take six top teams from the Big 12, what a coup that would be! It certainly would have vaulted the Pac [16] to the top of the conference heap. The combined strength of the Pac 10 and the Big 12? The plan was genius. At the very least you have devoured one of the conferences that was ahead of you.

But it didn’t work out. Dan Beebe convinces Texas, and thereby the rest of the Big 12, to stay, sit, and wait. In the end, the Pac 10 does take Colorado from them, and acquires Utah from the MWC. While not the move Larry Scott wanted, he has added talent to his conference, and a championship game, while the Big 12 has lost two teams and their own championship game. The Pac 12 has leap-frogged the Big 12.

Now, the MWC has had this little brother syndrome for as long as anyone can remember. They are the conference that is just not quite good enough to play with the big boys and have a full share. But they’re always so close, especially when you consider the football talent of the Big East. So when the Pac 12 took Utah, creating imbalance, Craig Thompson took Boise St. from the WAC. The divide between the MWC and WAC had never been wider, and Boise was a good enough replacement for Utah. Balance restored.

Then BYU went independent. And TCU went to the Big East. These moves widened the divide between BCS and non-BCS, by removing top-MWC talent and giving some of it to the Big East. Thompson again grabs for as much strength as he can, and adds Nevada, Fresno, and later, Hawaii from the WAC. Not quite balance restored, but the MWC just took out it’s next closest competitor for good, and they’re still the “just outside the BCS” conference.

Here’s a look at a possible conference ranking based on the recent moves:

  1. SEC
  2. Big 10
  3. Pac 12
  4. Big 12
  5. ACC
  6. Big East
  7. MWC
  8. C-USA

Who isn’t moving?

Conferences and teams that do not perceive imbalances or who feel that the imbalances are in their favor will not choose to move. Here are the main ones:

The SEC and Big 10 Why? They’re at the top. Once someone proves otherwise, on the field, then further expansion for these conferences will look reasonable.

The ACC Why? They just don’t seem to have that drive to want to be at the top. With all of the changes around them, they seem to have been satisfied with the status quo, and so far, no one has come looking for their members.

BYU Why? The obvious answer is, because they just did. The not-so-obvious answer is that they simply are better off as an independent than they could be in a conference. BCS access and difficulty scheduling seem to be the biggest downsides. If any BCS teams choose to go independent in the near future (maybe Texas?), it seems likely that instead of the Notre Dame exception, the BCS will simply create a blanket “independents” rule, which would benefit BYU. The scheduling difficulties have been eased somewhat by the partnership with ESPN. I could see BYU accepting a conference invitation in the future, if said conference would allow BYU to retain their TV deal. It’s not likely, but given the current landscape, it can’t be completely ruled out.

What Moves are Ahead

The Pac 12 did not meet their goals last year. Larry Scott’s vision was for the Pac [whatever] to become the premier conference in college football. They didn’t. To them, there is still an imbalance that they are going to fight to correct. The Pac 12 will expand again. It’s likely that they will approach some of the same Big 12 schools; whoever they do add will have to be high in talent. Simply having 16 teams does not make you the best.

The Big 12 should make a move. If they continue this “sit and wait for it all to blow over” strategy, they will cease to be a conference. The college football world perceives the Big 12 to be weak and on the verge of collapse, with rumors of Texas’ possible independence and Texas A&M wanting a spot in the SEC, etc. If the Big 12 does not make a move to strengthen themselves, they will either get picked over by other conferences, or will fall apart from within.

You can argue all day long about the “other sports” having to be good enough to compete in a new conference, but football rules college sports. Boise State is the hottest commodity out there. The last remaining non-AQ powerhouse (that is to say, they own more BCS wins than most BCS teams have). A BCS conference will take Boise State before conference realignment is done. It would make the most sense to add Boise in a Pac-16 deal, because it lies so close to the conference footprint, but the Big East (come on, if TCU is East…) may take them as well.

While a conference championship game adds a dangerous, extra hurdle for that undefeated team to go through before they reach the national championship game, it does seem to be the going standard now. Conferences with a championship game are generally perceived as strong, and those without are perceived as weak. And honestly, who enjoys naming a champion based on tie-breaks? It’s great for the fans and the voters reward those teams that face tough conference championships before bowl season. The (actual or perceived) imbalance here is the power of that game and 12 teams behind it. The pressure is on for conferences like the Big 12, Big East, and the MWC to get up to 12 members and add a championship game. And if (when) the Pac 12 expands to 16, all hell will break loose.

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Expansion Winners and Losers

July 29, 2011

Last summer, the college football world was on the edge of its collective seat, waiting to see where the dominoes of conference expansion were going to fall. Nearly a year later, most of those dominoes are in place, and the first round of changes seems to be finished…aside from a few WAC/MWC teams that have another year before they can make their changes.

What has been the effect of all of these changes? It has left the college football landscape a bit unbalanced. There have been winners and losers, and we now have some conferences that are thriving, and others that are on the verge of dying. Has expansion ended? No. But here’s a look at who won and lost the first round.

The SEC: Winner

The SEC set the bar so high that all changes to other conferences are simply trying to attain what the SEC already has. The last 5 national champions have all come from the SEC. Despite all of the change in the conferences around them, the SEC remains the top conference in college football. The only way to remove that honor will be through beating them on the field, consistently.

The Big 10: Winner

The Big 10 (B1G) gets the “bang for your buck” award. They made one move, the addition of Nebraska. They brought in a historic program with a national brand that will have an immediate impact as part of the top-tier of football teams in the conference. Adding Nebraska also brought their team total to twelve, making possible a championship game. Co-winner: Nebraska, who got out from under Texas.

The Pac 10 (now 12): Winner

The Pac 10 had perhaps the grandest ambition of any conference, under the direction of Larry Scott. When the Big 10 added one team, the Pac 10 decided it would try and add 6, effectivelybeheading the Big 12 conference by taking 6 of its top teams. While that deal did not work out, the Pac 10 did acquire Utah and Colorado to bring its number of members to 12. Utah brings a high-caliber program with two perfect seasons this decade, and both schools at least bring in a share of their respective television markets. The added Pac 12 Championship game, along with the recently announced TV contract is more than enough evidence that the Pac 12 is in good shape, and the moves made were good ones. Co-winners: Utah, and especially Colorado.

The Big East: Winner

The Big East made one of those “less is more” moves, in adding TCU (starting in 2012). The Horned Frogs have been one of the top programs in college football over the last several years, and they will instantly contend for the Big East title. The Big East, even with TCU, will still only have 9 football teams (while their basketball league remains severely bloated). The Big East isn’t known for great football, but TCU will add some immediate credibility, and help to distance the conference from the Non-AQ’s.

The Big 12 (XII): Loser

Nebraska starting things off by sliding over into the Big 10, which left the Big 12 off balance. Several Big 12 schools had the opportunity to head to the Pac [16], but were kept in the Big 12 when Texas reached an agreement to launch their own television network. This decision, while obviously good for Texas, wasn’t necessarily the best move for the rest of the league. Certainly the bottom-tier of the conference will be happy to stay so long as there is a conference, but schools like Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M and Texas Tech surely must be wondering what might have been, especially in light of the Pac 12′s new television contract that was announced last week. Dan Beebe’s “let’s all sit tight” approach might work out in the long-run, but losing a flagship school like Nebraska, along with your title game does seem to necessitate some sort of action. Colorado fled to the Pac 12, but the rest of the teams are seemingly trapped in a 10 team conference without a title game, and Texas is making more money than before. Winner here: Texas, who maintains control of their conference.

The MWC: Sore Loser

The MWC turned out to be one of the more turbulent conferences last summer. Utah was invited to the Pac 12, Boise St. was invited to the MWC, BYU chose to leave the conference to pursue independence and TCU will be taking its talents to the Big East, starting in 2012. The MWC also made a grab for Hawaii (football only), Nevada, and Fresno State, which will all join in 2012. Once all is said and done next season, the MWC will have effectively traded their former top tier (TCU, BYU, Utah) for the top tier of the WAC (Boise State, Fresno State, Nevada, Hawaii). When all is said and done, the MWC will have become a ten team conference, but what was a conference led by 3 teams will soon be dominated solely by Boise State, making the MWC more of a zombie-WAC+.

The WAC: Biggest Loser

Karl Benson had a good thing going. Then Boise St. went to the MWC, the potential deal with BYU fell through, and then all hell broke loose. Hawaii, Nevada, and Fresno State were picked by the media to finish 1st, 2nd and 3rd in conference play this year, and each of those teams will also be going to the MWC next season. The WAC has been scrambling to add more schools to its membership from Division 2, but that is only just enough to keep the conference alive. The WAC from 2012 forward will struggle to compete even with the weakest Division 1 conferences.

BYU: Probable Winner

So what about BYU and their crazy move toward independence? So far, you have to say the Cougars have done quite well for themselves. BYU has a very lucrative deal with ESPN that goes through 2020, and they have scheduled games with Notre Dame, Hawaii, Texas, Boise St, Georgia Tech, Utah, Oregon St, Utah St, UCF, West Virginia, and others. The 2011 and 2012 schedules are WAC-heavy, and the first few years of bowl tie-ins are lower-tier (Armed Forces, Poinsettia, and Kraft Fight-Hunger from 2011-2013). These first few years are a take-what-you-can-get period, so the real test of BYU independence will be what the schedule and bowls look like in 2013 and beyond. In the short run, BYU already has big name teams to play against, a killer TV deal (including at least 10 games on the ESPN family of networks in this season alone), talent, and a great coaching staff. Looking at where they would be if they stayed in the MWC…BYU is definitely a winner today.

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TCU 31, BYU 3

October 18, 2010

I called the game 35-10, and I have to say, I was much closer to the actual score than many of the  people I heard from before the game.  Apologies accepted.  A lot of people are really down on BYU this week because of the bad loss, but don’t forget – it was TCU this week, not Utah State.  We have a lot to be excited about, because there were several positives that I saw during the game.  Let’s take a look at how things went for the Cougars.

Offense. I’m not going to say much about the offense this week.  The 119th best passing attack went against the #1 defense (points against).  The Cougars had a scoring drive against TCU, notching a field goal, and ending TCU’s two game shutout streak.  Kudos to the offense for scoring.  They will have opportunities to look better over the next several weeks.  One note though: play calling continues to bewilder me.  First BYU drive of the second half ends on a 4th and 1 attempt on the BYU 48.  I realize that we were down 17-0, and it didn’t cost us on the next drive, but at this point in the game it seems a punt still makes sense.  Poor decision making and miscues led to short fields for TCU’s offense, and a tough game for BYU’s defense.

Offensive changes. O’Neil Chambers has been suspended for the remainder of the season (reasons not yet made pubic).  Bronco Mendenhall continues to support Anae’s play-calling, but you have to imagine that the next four games are must-wins for Anae to keep his position.  He’s currently sporting the 119th best passing attack in the country.  Yeah, out of 120.  While a mid-season replacement isn’t readily available as Mendenhall was to take over as DC, Brandon Doman might make a decent interim OC.  After all, can he really make things any worse? (I know, not a good argument for anything, but…)

Defense. Until 1:30 remaining in the second quarter, the BYU defense held TCU to only 3 points.  TCU’s first five drives ended like this: punt, punt, FG, turnover on downs, punt.  This from a top ten scoring offense that averages more than 40 points per game.  For 28:30 of the game, the Cougars were within one score of TCU.

3rd Quarter. This was the best quarter for the Cougars – TCU’s three drives this quarter each ended in a punt, and this is the quarter when BYU scored their field goal.  As I tweeted during the game – BYU won this quarter 3-0.  TCU has only “lost” one other quarter this year – the third quarter against Baylor, when the Bears outscored the Frogs 7-3.

Rush Defense. BYU’s goal was to make TCU one-dimensional.  The Bronco D held a top ten rushing offense (averaging around 270 rushing yards per game) to just 108.  They forced Andy Dalton to beat them through the air, and for much of the day, they frustrated his attempts to do so.

TCU’s Patterson not so Saintly. For someone who professes to not care about style points, the call on 4th and 3 (from the BYU 21 with 4:26 to go, and already leading 24-3) to throw the ball into the end-zone seems a bit odd.  Why not make the classy move and kick the field goal?  Here’s why: because 31-3 looks a lot better than 27-3.  Because Patty cares about what voters will think of the score, even if he won’t admit it.

What we know about TCU

TCU is 5th in the overall BCS standings, just released this weekend.  They are a team that dominates you on both sides of the ball.  They don’t make mistakes, and they capitalize on yours.  Next week they’re heading on to face a weakened Air Force team, but the date that they’ll have circled on their calendar is November 6th, when they face Utah in Salt Lake City.  They’re on the road to a BCS bowl, and a potential national title.

What we know about BYU

BYU turned a corner when Bronco reclaimed the defense and pulled out a win against San Diego State.  You don’t necessarily want to face TCU the week after turning a corner like that, but I believe that the positives we saw this week from the Cougars are enough to be happy about.  The BYU defense played nearly three great quarters – the first 28:30, and the third quarter.  In the end, it wasn’t enough to overcome the inept offense, but the defense played with fire and executed above expectations.  BYU’s schedule gets considerably easier over the next four games.  The combined record of their first seven opponents?  33-13.  The next four? 5-22.  The upcoming games are against Wyoming (2-5), UNLV (1-6), at Colorado State (2-5), and against New Mexico (0-6).  If the Cougars win those, they will be 6-5, and bowl eligible.

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