Archive for the ‘Football’ Category

Early, Early August Football Notes – Figure Four of Shakin the Southland

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Finally, it is here. Fall football is on the cusp. That means that we (the boys over at www.shakinthesouthland.com) no longer have to debate uniforms and who is or is not a true fan and can get down to the dirty (although, we are opinionated and get pissed pretty easily, so you may see some more “extracurricular commentary” in the pipe line).

I will give the disclaimer that I was working independently and, at times, in parallel with Dr. B’s earlier work, so some views may be duplicated below.

The big question I always hear on the street is: “Figurefour, in all your infinite wisdom about anything and everything in the universe ultraverse, what is going to happen to the 2010 Tiger football squad.” Well folks, that is the question and fortunately, I think I have the (preseason) answers. Just hit the jump to see what I’m generally thinking as we head into August practice.

The Tigers will be a little better than most folks out there think we will fare. Clemson, if we can get our sh** together at the wide receiver position and stay healthy up front, can be a pretty good football team. Here are some general thoughts going into the fall. Beware, we will get into the nitty-gritty and will be brutally honest as we move through the off-season and into the regular season.

What are we looking at here at STS? I can’t speak for the good Dr., but will give my opinion. We gave the rookies a break here at STS, and that will all change this season. I really expect improvement out of Billy Napier and think that we will not see the same bs to start the year in ‘10 that we saw last year. Likewise, I think that Dabo has figured out how to better manage things (media, players, coaches, schemes, etc…). We will be looking critically at our wide receivers coach, Jeff Scott. Each of these three guys got a mulligan last season but will be fair game for criticism after each man has spent a full season in his current role.

.The State, ESPN, P&C

Coach J. Scott and our receivers group will be looked at closely all season because of the lack of production we have gotten out of this group recently. To put it bluntly, our receivers (the guys who were here last season, as I cannot accurately discuss Freshmen) are less than adequate. We discussed the shortcomings with this position over and over again. I really don’t know if too much has changed (especially with the upperclassmen) since this time last year (here is what we thought at that time) at the receiver position other than Jacoby Ford is now a Raider.

I really hope that we/I am overly concerned because this offense will be limited if Kyle Parker has no one he can depend upon to throw the ball. If Clemson ends up with a static rotation of Dye, Clear, and Ashe, we will be in for a long year throwing the football. We need exponential improvement from the veterans at this position and will rely upon some young guys to show their skills early on.

We are obviously interested in how a young guy like DeAndre Hopkins will perform this season. He has turned some heads during voluntary 7 on 7 drills this summer. We are also curious if a guy like Jaron Brown or Marquan Jones can live up to their “hyped talent” and be productive members of this position group.

Kyle Parker coming back is a big deal, make no mistake about that one. Parker has a cannon and if he can improve on his accuracy issues will be very good. Coach Swinney has openly discussed his potential future in the NFL. While I am not sure how much of this talk was the salesman in Dabo coming out, it is obvious that Parker is a talented athlete. I, like most other folks out there, think that his height (and baseball career) will keep him out of the pro game. However, we really don’t care at this moment about such and are only focused on Clemson’s 2010 football season.

Not having to run another Freshman QB out to start the season (again) is beneficial for this football program. Also knowing that this is probably Parker’s last season in Tigertown assures the coaches that they will absolutely have to slam Tajh Boyd into more games to assure that he has experience in anticipation of Parker forgoing his final two years of eligibility.

While we have a great deal of uncertainty in the pass catchers at the WR slot, Clemson was able to introduce the tight end into the mix more often last season. Clemson’s best pass catcher was tight end Michael Palmer. TE Dwayne Allen gives us lots of hope (and at this point our biggest hope) in the pass catching portion of the game.

Allen is more talented than his predecessor and if he catches the ball half as well as Michael Palmer did we are in good shape. Allen is a Shannon Sharpe type of guy who has the talent to line up in a three point stance, can be flex out, or be placed in the slot to be a viable threat. The coaching staff has been jacked up about this guy for a while now and insists that Allen has all the tools to be the best tight end in school history. With all this talent, we expect a lot out of this guy this season and will be watching closely to assure that the coaches are getting everything they can out of this potential star both in the passing game and through his run blocking.

The biggest talent loss from ‘09 is obviously Spilldog. C. J. Spiller is a special player that we all know tons about, thus I will not bore you with the highlights of Spiller’s Clemson career. Spiller’s replacements, we think, will do a fine job in the backfield. Jamie Harper and Andre Ellington are two fine backs who have differing running styles. I am really big on Ellington, as he has great quickness and explosion when hitting holes. Ellington ripped off several nice gains last season by locating the hole, immediately hitting it, then getting through it without dancing around or trying to get too cute. Harper was a little tentative last season running the ball but did show glimmers of his hyped greatness bestowed upon him coming into school. Again, I honestly believe that Clemson will be just fine at the running back position in 2010.

Up front offensively, we have a handful or so who appear to be ready. The loss of Wilson Norris eats into our depth and I will be extremely concerned if any starter goes down this season. Of course everyone out there knows STS’s views regarding offensive lineman recruiting and development, so I will spare you from hearing more about these concerns. Hopefully this group can stay healthy and has matured/developed enough that we can maintain consistency at the LOS.

Defensively, Clemson is probably in a little better spot than last season. We obviously lost a couple veteran corners but replace them with guys who have gotten quality snaps over the past few years. Up front, we should be jam-up. Losing Sapp to the graduation and Jamie Cumbie to off-the-field shenanigans will impact our front four. However, we do expect this to be a quality group if we can maintain proper fundamental play.

Our secondary is fine also. In fact, Dr. B. will tell you straight up that Hall is one of the best players in America. The problem that Clemson will face is the same one we saw last season…linebacker play. Clemson cannot endure more of the same of the (lack of) fundamental play we saw last season at this position. I would like to at least be in the position to complain about technique, but last year’s crew was so far out of the play at times it is useless to talk about such things. Hopefully a full off-season allowed Steele to make improvements here.

One thing that has to improve is the Clemson kicking game. Richard Jackson will need to get a little more control to go along his booming leg. That and missing extra points is unacceptable.

On the topic of special teams, losing Spiller will be most felt by our kick return teams. Spiller could–and did-break big ones week in and week out. When Spiller did not take it to the house, he often forced the opponents to kick away from him. This threat gave Clemson excellent field position all season even when C. J. wasn’t able to even field a kick.

Spring is here…baseball, basketball, and football

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Today we will give a Spring shoutout hitting on some aspects of springtime in Tigertown.  Feel free to come visit us at www.shakinthesouthland.com for more insight and updates on Clemson Tiger athletics.

We will start with baseball today.  The season is still young, but I am pleasantly pleased with last weekend’s outcome in the 3 game set with our foe from Columbia.  Clemson was able to fight back for a big win in game 1 and throttled SC in game 3.  The obvious disappointment was the performance of the bullpen in the buffer game of the series, giving up late runs to allow the Gamecocks to dodge a Clemson sweep.

I will be the first to admit that March baseball is relatively unimportant in the grand scheme of things.  You will also hear me state that one or two games really cannot capture how good a baseball team really is.  Baseball is a completely different monster than either of the other two major sports for a variety of reasons.  It differs from college football because a playoff system dictates the winner and the main thing that counts is getting hot late in the year.  The large number of games played puts a premium on consistency.  Series play also gives you a better idea of who the better teams are by allowing teams to immediately avenge fluke losses or a simple bad night on the diamond.  Teams hope to grind through the regular season then peak for the conference then NCAA tournaments, with the good teams showing consistent improvement into the summer.

Purely from a fan’s perspective, I wish these two teams could get together for both an early season and late season series for a good overall comparison.  These two programs have a lot to offer from both a regional and national standpoint. First off, both schools have baseball programs that have been consistently good.  Clemson has been good forever, USC since Tanner came on board.  Both schools can boast nice baseball facilities.  Beautiful Tiger Field has seen substantial upgrades over the past decade and SC has a new stadium that is extremely impressive (especially when you realize the facility is ONLY utilized for USC baseball and does not host a minor league squad after college baseball season).  While we will probably never see any more than three regular season games between the two teams in a given year, more games would be nice for the fans.

That being said, you can take what you wish from the SC series.  I really hope that this team can build some momentum from the SC series as we move towards conference play.  We all like taking the series from the in-state rival, but let’s remember that a baseball season is long and grueling.  The best teams peak at the end and are flush with pitching, something that will be a question for Clemson as we progress.

Basketball wise, this team was one W shy of our preseason prediction of 10 ACC wins this year.  On the year, Trevor Booker has been a disappointment, forgetting the fierceness that he showed in years past.  Lack of effort, basic fundamentals, and a the need for a pure shooter have hurt this team over the long haul.  Honestly, I expected more out of this group and have been sorely disappointed with the output and overall effort shown on the court..  The loss to NCST was indicative of poor effort and a team that was really unprepared for ACC Tournament play.  We were pathetic (as usual) on the offensive end and allowed the Pack to shoot well from the field for most of the evening.

I have to think that Clemson is in the Big Dance, but really would understand if we were left out and would not be too pissed at the selection committee given the epic collapses and lapses we have seen out of this squad this season.  The Tigers have been pretty average all season and, when including the tournament, finished just above average (9-8) in an ACC that is having a “down year” when compared to previous ACC seasons.

While I think the group probably has the ability to make it deep into the NCAA tournament, there are tons of questions left about their heart and character.  We will see if one of the Freshmen can come up big in postseason action.  Can Purnell actually get his team excited about a game in March?  Will Trevor Booker actually give effort all game long?  Clemson has played itself into yet another tough scenario by losing games they should have won, giving minimal effort, and not playing good fundamental ball.  Now the Tigers will suffer with a probable 10-seed.  Thanks for playing.

On to a few football items near and dear to my heart.  Dr. B has already exposed the ridiculousness that is the “indoor practice facility”, so I won’t go into it too much but will fire in a few takes.  First, is an indoor facility absolutely necessary here?  No, this is a luxury item that is nice to have to allow players a year-round practice area but not an absolute necessity.  I will say, there are some facilities–I have toured the Nebraska IPF–that are magnificent.  IMO, these items are an indicator of how serious an administration takes its athletic programs.

However, at a place like Nebraska who’s administration actually wants its athletic programs to succeed, their facility houses a variety of weight rooms, general areas, indoor beach volleyball courts (yes, they are good at beach volleyball in Nebraska–so good in fact that they were not happy with local sand and were importing their beach volleyball sand in from Hawaii when I was out there), and a state of the art indoor practice facility.  While I understand that their climate makes such a complex a necessity, this school did not go half-ass when putting up a structure.

Thus, the core issue that I have with this indoor track facility is that it is a cheap out for Clemson.  B. Robinson sold the fact that it would be a great tool for the football team when not being used by track, when in-fact that is not the case.  I am not sure how necessary such a structure is at Clemson and really don’t have an IPF at the top of my list.  However, for the administration to EVER claim that they were meeting the needs of the football team with this track bubble is preposterous.  The point of the story is that we are (and have been) falling behind and our administration does not care.  We are so preoccupied playing the “shell-game to a Top 20 university” that (I believe) the administration almost secretly roots against the athletic teams and merely views the football program as a revenue stream to subsidize non-revenue sports and the general university coffer.  Clemson would be much better off embracing athletics (and football in particular) as athletic programs are some of the best recruiting tools that a university has.  However, this is how it has worked at Clemson since Jan 1990, and I don’t see it changing especially with the higher ups keen to lag on items that could immediately help athletic programs (training table is a pretty obvious one, but we will save that one for another day).

Moving along, Clemson is obviously in the midst of spring practice.  While I used to get all jazzed up about the in’s and out’s of SP, I have come to realize that this is pretty much a mini-camp for the boys and that half seven-eighths of the crap that comes out of the Spring has no real bearing on fall football.  Hence, I will refer to this period as a refresher course for existing players.  This time period gives the reserves a chance to brush up on Clemson’s playbook, learn basic fundamentals, and begin jockeying amongst themselves for slots in the fall.  That being said, here are a few spots that I am interested in fundamental issues and how the competition looks headed into summer:

1.  Wide receiver.  Our receiver corps was pretty slim last year and is really lacking productivity this season.  When we did see someone other than Ford, Ashe, or Dye as a WR on the field (this happened mostly early in the season), the results were poor as these guys could not catch a cold butt naked in Alaska in the middle of winter.  We have to see vast improvement here.  Hopefully McNeal will step up after his RS year.  I really expect Jaron Brown and Marquan Jones to see more of the field this fall, and would like to see these guys push for starting roles.  Other that Dye, we really have a lot of question marks (and even with Dye, there are still some questions that need to be answered, although I have heard a lot of positives about his leadership and progression for this team).

2.  Tight End.  I realize that Dwayne Allen played a lot as a freshman, and gave this squad some really good snaps.  I am really curious how he will respond being the starting TE.  We know that you can flex him and get quality routes and catches, but how will he hold up out of a three-point stance running the football all game?  Will we have to move a better blocker out there in obvious running situations?  I think that Allen has the ability to do these things and have seen numerous articles writing about the staff being very excited about his ability.  Let’s hope that he will be able to fill Mike Palmer’s void in all aspects of the game.

3.  Offensive line.  We go through this one almost daily, so no surprises here.  With Cloy out, and Brad at the healm be prepared for the usual 5-lineman Monte game that good ‘ole BS likes to pull at any given point.

4.  Linebackers.  Another spring is great for Kevin Steele and crew.  This time period will hopefully allow the staff to straighten up a lot of the issues we saw last season that involved players grossly out of position.  I really wish Justin Parker was in school and could participate in these spring drills, as we are thin and desperately need his services.

5.  Odds and ends.  Obviously we all will be paying attention to Boyd as he gets a lot of reps this spring.  He has wow’ed most of the staff and current players on the practice squad and we are all excited about seeing him rep with the 1st and 2nd-teamers.  I have heard that Ellington has bulked up a little.  As has been stated here numerous times, I am really excited about seeing more of him on the field IF he finds the cure for the fumbleitis he had at points of last season.  Not too concerned about the DB’s and know that whoever does not win the corner battle will still see a lot of action over the course of the season.

Thoughts as Spring Practice Begins – 5 Questions

Monday, March 8th, 2010

“I’m real excited about getting onto the field and starting with this 2010 team,” he said. “We’ve answered a lot of questions this year. We’re at a different point with this team. We’ve been through the fire. It’s not new. We know how we want to practice, what we want to practice. Last year, we signed 12 [in the recruiting class]. We feel good about this class we’re bringing in here. Minimally, we should be better. We should be a smarter team, staff. That should show from day one.

“If we can do the job the right way, it will help us play at a high-level every week. It’s a focus area for us. We’re good enough. As we evaluate all of the film, we’re pretty pleased with all of the information. We’ve got to take a little bit more pride in our consistency. If we can do that, we can have a very good year.” (source)

Clemson started spring practice yesterday, and now comes the time when you hear of the offseason all-stars who get built up to superhuman levels and then come crashing down during the season. Last year it was Antoine McClain that got rave reviews from everyone, and then missed the most assignments of any starting lineman. Oh, and remember Rendrick Taylor, the Football King of Spring?

We’ve done our Positional Analyses (and the last one for the DL will come out this week), so I don’t see any reason to do a spring preview. I would just keep in mind that whatever news is reported, here or elsewhere, in the next few weeks should be taken with a grain of salt. It is still just practice and scrimmages, its not performance under pressure in Fall against Auburn or UNC. Some guys don’t practice worth a crap (Walker) and some light people up in practice so much that you’d think they are made of gold (Taylor).

This spring, we’ll be looking at a few question marks.

1. WR corps. Can the young guys catch yet? Can they run routes any better and get open when we don’t have Spiller and Palmer to catch the passes?

2 .Left Guard and the Tackle situation. Right now, David Smith is being moved to LG, but I don’t see how he beats Mason Cloy for it in August if he’s 100%. I think Norris should be moved to LG for Spring since he reps as a Guard already, but Brad disagrees. Technique things are the same for both positions so Smith can still learn at Guard, but I’d rather have him rep against the quicker Ends/LBs he’d see in Fall when he’s moved back to Tackle.

Now with Price repping at 2-RT, Walker will have no one to light a fire under him. With his reputation so far as a lax practice player, we might come out disappointed with Walker in a few weeks. Brandon Thomas will start repping at 2-LT as a redshirt freshman. Recall that the 2’s roll out as a unit in practice, so you cant tell Smith to rep at 1-LG and then 2-L/RT successively, so the depth chart is a bit misleading.

In reality, Smith would step in at either L or RT if Hairston or Walker went down. Putting in Price or Thomas shouldn’t cause you to have a meltdown.

3. I have a suspicion that Tajh Boyd will be built up so much by writers this Spring that he will be the favorite player on the team this fall by TardNetters, especially if he doesnt play. Everybody loves the backup, and you’ll hear people screaming for Boyd at the first sign of Parker struggling. Just remember, Parker has one year of reading NCAA defenses, and that experience counts. I also suspect you’ll see at least 10 articles about Parker’s baseball/football dilemma.

4. Linebackers. We need them to step up. They are talented, at least according to the recruiting sites, but none really has done anything yet. We’ll see a definite rotation this spring but I suspect if a few guys continue to put on some weight, then things will change in Fall and the post-spring chart will be meaningless. I would not be surprised to hear us sticking to more Nickel and running out Meeks as a pseudo-SAM backer like we did with DMac 2 years ago.

5. Corner. Most of you, myself included, think that Maxwell will have one spot locked down soon enough. He did admirably last year. The other though is up for grabs. It could be Brewer, it could be Sensabaugh, or maybe someone like Spencer Adams will get moved over with the speed he has, but I think/hope Gilchrist steps into it.

Year 2 of a defensive scheme reaps the most gains, especially a complex one like we run. If the defense is not well ahead of the offense this spring I would be concerned. Bowers needs to step up his game to make up for the loss of Sapp, but I’m excited by having both Safeties back and expect quite a bit of 2 High Shell coverage.

Swinney will seek a new commitment to excellence this year, says Greg Wallace. We’ll see.

Pre-Miami Round-up

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

“We won, thank the Lord,” said my cousin Geer after the Wake Forest game.  I will say AMEN! and thereby also break the praying-for-Clemson-football-wins taboo. 

Had we lost to Wake, we would have been 2-4 with a looming road trip to Miami.  Thank the Lord, indeed.

Today I would like to hit several different topics.  I think you’ll find at least one of them very interesting.

The Rumor: I am not going to repeat the Big Rumor surrounding the athletic department, but I’m guessing that most of you readers have already heard it.  I heard it from several different sources Saturday at tailgates.  All I can say is that I have not been able to confirm it.  If there is any truth to it, we will be hearing it from the athletic department in the next few weeks.

Outliers: Best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell argues in his book Outliers that it usually takes 10,000 hours of dedicated practice to be dominant in a complicated task.  He notes that Bill Gates started programming on a mainframe as a kid, and Tiger Woods starting playing golf at age three.

There are 2080 hours in a work year with 40 hour work weeks.

There is a NCAA 20 hour rule concerning practice during the school year, and I’m sure that Rich Rodriguez is the only one to break it.  How many hours do our players put in during the year?  The article I linked says that college football players spend 44.8 hours/week focused on football.  10,000 hours would be accumulated in 4.3 years. 

This could account for Wake Forest’s success with lesser talent.  By redshirting virtually everyone, Jim Grobe gets his starters much closer to the 10,000 hour threshold over the course of five years.

Specifically, I wonder how many hours our young offensive line and receivers have put in over the years.  2500 for a redshirt freshman? 

Has Dabo hit even 3000 hours as a head coach yet?

Has Billy Napier hit 3000 hours as an offensive coordinator?

Can Kyle Parker get to his 10,000 hours quicker by being a film room junkie?

As a 20+ year fan, I know that I have started to see the game more clearly…blocking schemes, defenses, personnel groupings, mismatches, etc.  It’s hard to believe that a quarterback wouldn’t see this as he barrages his mind with game film, 20 hour rule be cursed.  Can working with more game tape hurt?  Ronald Reagan said, “Hard work won’t kill me, but why risk it?”

Concussions: Last night I watched the 11 October broadcast of 60 Minutes on my DVR.  Their report on football head injuries was really scary; they focused on long-term problems that players with concussions experience.  This issue has gotten a lot of coverage recently because of Tim Tebow.

I get knots in my stomach thinking about just one of my four boys playing contact sports.

As someone who has been treated by a neurologist — the middle school bullies were right, because doctors have told me there really is something not right in my head — I know that the area between your ears is priceless real estate.  That’s why it wouldn’t bother me in the least if Scotty Cooper were to miss an extra week with his concussion.  It’s just not worth the risk.

Miami:  There is a chance that I will be going to the Miami game with a couple of friends of mine, ditching our wives and kids at home in Greenville.  Though he was talking about Christmas, not road trips with the guys, I hear Andy Williams’ singing, “It’s the most wonderful time of the year.”

If we play like we did against Wake, then we have a good opportunity to win.  Miami has an athletic offensive line, but Clemson can match that with our front four. 

Kevin Steele will come up with a way to pressure Jacory Harris, and I think that Clemson comes close to matching Miami’s speed.

It all comes down to limiting the turnovers, penalties, and missed assignments, as coaches prattle on about in their weekly press conferences.

As a Super Fan who has racked up more than 10,000 hours watching football, I have one suggestion for our Tigers: block.  It’s 90% of every winning offensive game plan.

Please send fawning emails to sectionHrowJ@gmail.com and visit www.clemsontigernation.com.

First-down production

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Struggles on first down have been a big issue for Clemson this season, and of late the Tigers’ offensive staff has really hammered that home in their explanations for how this offense can start moving the ball with regularity.

Overall, I think it’s valid to compare Clemson’s offensive progress with Miami’s as the season unfolds.

Do the Hurricanes have better talent? Certainly appears so. They’re better at QB, WR and OL. And if Clemson is better at tailback, it ain’t by much because Graig Cooper and Javarris James are quite the tandem.

Dabo Swinney and Billy Napier would love to have some of Miami’s weapons. There’s no doubt about that. I’m guessing Napier would cut off one or two of his fingers for one or two of the Hurricanes’ receivers.

Still, I think it’s interesting to chart the two offenses because they’re both being run by first-year coordinators.

Miami was mediocre-to-bad on offense last season, and the ‘Canes went with a veteran in Mark Whipple. Clemson was mediocre-to-bad on offense last season, and the Tigers went with the inexperienced Swinney-Napier tandem.

So far, Miami’s offense has been a splendid success. And a big reason for that is first-down success.

I sifted through the play-by-play of Miami’s win over Oklahoma and found that the Hurricanes averaged a whopping 7.4 yards per play on first down. Included was 8.3 yards per rush on first down.

It’s a lot easier to call plays when you’re putting up those kinds of numbers. Defensive coordinators are constantly guessing, making Whipple’s play-action game deadly.

Against Maryland, Clemson averaged 4.8 yards on 32 first-down plays. The Tigers ran 16 times for 50 yards on first down for an average of 3.1 yards per carry.

Against TCU, the Tigers averaged 5.48 yards on first down with a clip of 4.18 yards on 16 first-down runs.

On the season, Clemson has rushed 95 times for 440 yards on first down (not counting sacks). That’s an average of 4.63 yards per rush, and Swinney and Napier will certainly take 4 yards on every first down if they could.

A deeper look at the numbers, though, reveals the Tigers’ real problem: too many first-down runs that produce minimal yardage.

On 41 of the 95 first-down runs (43 percent), Clemson has rushed for 2 yards or less. That includes 10 runs of 2 yards or less against Maryland, with five of them coming in the fourth quarter.

The Tigers are averaging 16 first downs per game, a stat that ranks near the bottom of the ACC. Miami is averaging 20 per game, a mediocre average that is probably tied to a turnover margin (minus-3) that ranks 11th in the ACC.

Today’s opponent, Wake Forest, ranks atop the ACC in first downs with 22.1 per game.

It should be pointed out that the Tigers’ passing game isn’t exactly flourishing on first down (or any down). But the offense would be in much better position to sustain drives if the running game weren’t stuffed so much on first down.

They could also help themselves by eliminating the dropped passes and false-start penalties, but that’s another blog for another day.

Should be an interesting game later today against the Deacs.

Second Half Checklist

Friday, October 16th, 2009

It is obvious that there are many more problems with this Clemson football team than we first thought.  The same core problems we were concerned about going into the season are still haunting the Tigers.

Let’s refer to the original concepts (elaborated on at clempsonfootball and here at Raycom), then expand these items from there.

Toughness: This is the topic that Swinney has harped on for the past 6-9 months, so we will continue to look at this item.  My metric for toughness is the will to win and the determination that no matter the obstacle, one will overcome and find a way to be the victor at the end of the day.  Before, the opinion was that Clemson was considerably tougher than years past, moving in the right direction, but still had a way to go.  While I think this team is still a little tougher than last season, there is still a lot to want for in this category.

The defense is still coming out and playing pretty well (at least for 3 quarters).  The second quarter effort in the Maryland game was unacceptable.  However, this defense forced many quite a few Maryland punts after 3-5 play drives.  The defense (and the UMd coaching staff) gave Clemson every chance to win last week.  Clemson’s defense has played well late in football games, giving up 3 points to Tech, an early 4th quarter TD to TCU, and nothing in the 4th to UMd (and only a 1 yard touchdown score set up by a punt return in the 3rd).  I have bigger fish to fry than the defensive effort this season, and the defense is surely (while not perfect) good enough to take the Tigers a long way and have stepped up in crucial situations to give this offense opportunities to win football games.  While I don’t know if you can ever be too tough on defense, this unit is good, plays hard, and has really gotten the butt end of the  deal from the CU offense.

Offensively, the Tigers are not tough.  Clemson cannot punch the football in the end zone.  Clemson cannot prove to get tough yards when necessary.  Whether CU has an athlete problem, strategy problem, or experience problem, this offense (other than CJ Spiller) has not shown that “want” and desire this season.

It is tough to pile on a freshman QB.  While I think there are many aspects of Parker’s game that need improvement, his early-career shortcomings derive from inexperience.  After showing poise in the GT game, Parker has not played as well as in his first two contests.  It is tough to put the game in a freshman’s hands repeatedly.  This is not a free-pass for KP, just an honest assessment to this point in his career.

Up front, this offensive line gets no push.  While improved over this time last year, we are not moving bodies and definitely not firing off the ball.  There are repeated missed assignments and the tackle position (other than Hairston, when healthy) has been slow and weekly gets embarrassed.

I am not sure whether the problem at receiver is lack of mental toughness/awareness or poor coaching.  Dropping balls can be attributed to lack of athleticism or poor concentration.  I think the latter is the case.  Poor route running/blocking technique is attributed to laziness or not being corrected (coached) when a rounded off route is run.  Either way, it is Jeff Scott’s (and Swinney as this group’s former position coach) to get these items straightened out.  Overall, and other than Ford, this group has really struggled all season and are not mentally tough enough to make the key plays when the game is on the line.

The running back position has not had much to work with this season.  However, Spiller has run extremely hard and done a fantastic job.  Harper has been tentative running the ball and Ellington looks like a back with tons of talent but has put the football on the ground at times this year.  Bottom line is that Spiller will get the vast majority of the touches, particularly in important situations, which is fine by me.

The tight ends have proven that they can catch the football this season.  So far, both Palmer and Allen have made plays in important situations.  As their role seems inevitable to expand, I will hold off judgment on this group until later.

Coaching decisions appear choppy.  With all the rumors floating around (true or not), it at least appears as though the group is pissed off and definitely wants to win.  The defensive side of the ball has been there before and seems to have what it takes to win close football games (that is what tough coaches do, pull out the tight ones).  Lack of fundamental soundness and repeated poor outings on the offensive side of the ball can be attributed to inexperience and poor effort.  Not being athletic enough is one thing, poor technique and execution is another.  This offensive staff has publicly committed to narrowing down the playbook to get things right.  Tough coaches hammer home important ideas to make sure the core concepts are done correctly EVERY time.  The offensive strategy coming out of the regrouping (off) week will show us what this staff is really like.  If the attitude is as haphazard and keeps allowing fundamental errors with no adjustments, then the opinion will be that this offensive staff lacks the will to win.  For the time being, I will attribute the early season follies to inexperience at many positions, notable the head coach and offensive coordinator and will hold off “coaching toughness” assessments until season’s end.

Quarterback Play: Kyle Parker, after an impressive start to the season, is playing like a freshman.  He has all the physical tools to be a great player, but seems to have some trouble managing a football game.  KP has issues telegraphing many of his passes.  There also appears be having timing issues between him and his receivers.  Kyle looks timid in the pocket and tosses the ball off of his back foot at times.  I would really like to see him rely a little more on his ability to tuck the ball and run in order to simply move the sticks.  On the flip side of this coin, Parker has thrown the ball with good velocity all season, has had quite a few catchable balls dropped, and has been under fire all season from DT’s and linebackers.  Clemson’s OL and WR’s have to eliminate the mistakes and help their QB.

Furthermore, while I do not think that Parker has played poorly enough to be benched, my views on incorporating Will Korn into football games has changed since the season began and more so over the past week or so.  It is more common in college football to shuttle young QB’s in and out of the football game.  Will Korn played well enough against Maryland (IMO) to get some playing time, and was definitely not detrimental to the team’s cause.  It may be advantageous to get Parker to the sidelines for a series a quarter and get a fresh perspective of what is going on real-time in the football game.  Watching film and practicing against a scout team is one thing, getting through your rookie season in a trial-by-fire fashion is another.  Bottom line here is this position is (as advertised) inexperienced and has to mature (whether Korn or Parker is under the helm).  The play from this position is about where I expected it to be before the season, but has appeared to fall a little since the first two games of the year.

Coaching Decisions: This point may need assessment in the same fashion as the QB position.  We will start with the easy side of the football, the defensive side.  Clemson, other than a quarter of brain craps against Maryland and the inability to stop the inside QB rush against TCU/GT has looked good all year.  I like Steele’s more aggressive style.  Bowers and Sapp have been in the backfield a lot this season, and Clemson has forced a lot of 3 to 5 play possessions that ended in punts.  This group has done its part and it is a shame they are stuck with three losses to this point.

Offensively, Clemson has been described as choppy at best.  I don’t know what the dynamic is between Swinney and Napier, but will only say that the two must work together form a strategy that flows throughout the game.  To this point, Clemson’s play selection looks like a grab bag of formations, with no attempt to develop a consistent running game.  Clemson has to create an identity on offense.  I believe that more I formation and Allen/Palmer utilization is the correct strategy.  We do run a lot of “read” plays out of single back formations, and those have had some success with CJ utilizing his cutting ability to get up the field and gain some nice yardage.  Otherwise, I do not like the zero-back/no TE look for several reasons, and would be more than happy not to see these formations for the rest of the season.  The main reason for this is the poor play up front.  Clemson’s OT’s (specifically Lambert and Walker) have a tough time moving their feet to get into good position.  The Tigers need either a double team on the DE or, at minimal, a chip on this defender (in passing situations) to give the tackles a fighting chance.  If you know there is a weakness, do not let your opponent attack that weakness without recourse or adjustment.

Kicking Game: The status of Clemson’s return game has not changed since the season opening kickoff.  Ford/Spiller can score any time the opposition kicks to either.  No complaints here other than asking members of the kick return team to pay attention to “Peter” calls and get out of the way of the football.  The punt team has been acceptable, although it was disappointing to see the Terp return man streaking down the field in the 3rd quarter.  Otherwise, nothing too bad sticks out in my memory.

Richard Jackson has done a better job than I expected coming into the year.  I have been particularly impressed with his leg strength, but disappointed with key misses from short/mid-range this season.

Other Stuff: Wide receiver play has been particularly disappointing this season.  Dropped passes and missed blocks have littered the CU landscape so far.  At this point, I have seen enough inept play here and, like many others out there, would like to see TE’s Palmer and Allen (who have caught the ball well thus far) incorporated more into Clemson’s game plan.  Napier has repeatedly expressed these views in various media outlets, now he needs to put this plan into action.

At this point in the season, I hope the coaches realize that it may be time to ditch the multiple formations and variations and find something that works (and stick to it).  Offensively, it is tough to watch this team and its shortcomings on offense.  We are all also hoping to build more depth up front and keep improving here.  Clemson’s OL is still very delicate, and does not have the depth to absorb any injury up front.  The progression of Dalton Freeman should help some depth issues, as Mason Cloy will get some reps at guard cascading into reps at the tackle position for David Smith.

Somehow or another, this team is not all the way out of the ACC Atlantic division race.  It is ridiculous that this division is so weak, but winning this division is still attainable (possibly by finishing a ridiculous 0.500 in ACC play).  Clemson still has plenty of improvement to do if this team even wants to sniff 7 wins, though.

We will evaluate these metrics again in a future reading.

To Fix Clemson’s Offense

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Q: What does Kyle Parker do if he goes to take a mid-term exam, needs to make an “A”, and feels some pressure?

A: Rolls right and throws 60 yards down field.

Q: Does Kyle Parker know that in football you don’t have to get the steal sign to run?

A: Cheeseburger toast (this answer was contributed by my seven-year old, but I think you get the point of the joke.)

These are both things that I would have long conversations about with Kyle Parker, if I were the offensive coordinator during a bye week, which I’m not – even when it’s not a bye week.  I have written that “helpers” have conjured up 500 ideas for fixing the Clemson offense, and in this blog that number will swell by two or three.  Maybe the Clemson coaching staff will pick up on some of these nuggets of reason, cogency, and insight.  What coach hasn’t dreamed of having a helper monkey on the internet?  Fortunately, I volunteer.

First of all, Billy Napier has said that we need to get Dwayne Allen more involved in the game plan.  I agree.  The area where that falls apart is that he hinted we will have more two tight end sets to get Allen the ball.  I would like to see Allen playing with his hand up like (gulp!) South Carolina does with their tight ends, maybe even using pod formations like (gulp!) South Carolina.  Another factor is that the double tight end set is dangerously close to Rob Spence’s dreaded double-double tight end set, which rarely worked.  I just thought of another joke:

Q: What is Rob Spence’s plan for stopping nuclear proliferation in the Muslim world?

A: Add more tight ends, and then don’t use them to block for the bubble screen.

Like everyone else, I think we need to find an identity, whatever that means.  In fact, I would trade having an identity for a more esoteric measure of offensive productivity: scoring.

I think that we need to increase elements of misdirection in our offense.  Orbit motion secured an ACC Championship for Wake Forest a few years ago.  Former Clemson coordinator Rich Rodriguez has made a career of developing the read option, even if he didn’t invent it himself.  Urban Meyer has very fast partial qualifiers running through the backfield on many plays along with other read misdirection tactics.  Paul Johnson has three options on every play in what he calls his spread offense, a misnomer if there ever were one.  Miami’s Whipple has unbalanced lines and his guards and tackles are always on the run.  Some exceptions of note: Oklahoma and Southern Cal just have sick talent.  An observation of note: Clemson doesn’t have sick talent, just good talent.

I think that teams need to scheme to create confusion on defense.  I believe that this can not be done solely by being multiple on offense, even though Clemson was just outscored by a multiple offense in Maryland.  I believe the best offenses in college football use misdirection as their primary tactic.

Lou Holtz agrees with me.  I heard him say last week that offenses can’t move the ball unless they “fulshkeya”.  After hitting the replay button several times on my DVR, I realized he was saying, “false key you.” I concur, Lou.  Well said.  Unfortunately I don’t think in a bye week we can install an offense to fulshkeya, so we may have to wait until next year for the misdirection.

I’ve saved dropping the bomb for last.  C.J. Spiller needs to be moved to wide receiver.  His most dangerous plays this year have come as receiver and returner, not as running back.  He has run wheel routes and has been the check down receiver, but I think he can do much more.  He ran a beautiful fly route for a touchdown against Georgia Tech.  Having Spiller will take attention off of Jacoby Ford.  Indeed, Spiller is the equal of Ford as a receiver.  Andre Ellington would replace Spiller as starter at running back.  I definitely think we gain more by having Spiller at wide receiver than we lose by having Ellington start at running back.

Most of these ideas have been floating around along with many others, so I don’t claim them as exclusively my own, unless they are implemented and effective, in which case I retroactively claim them as my exclusive intellectual property, even if they started out as someone else’s original idea.  I learned this from a boss I once worked for.  It’s ethical; I promise.

Please send fawning emails to sectionHrowJ@gmail.com and visit www.clemsontigernation.com.

The Nightmare Scenario

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

I love focusing on the negative, so I was especially pleased when a friend called this week to explain a nightmare scenario that has tortured me all week.

Clemson is now 2-3 with a 1-2 record in the ACC.  The loss to Georgia Tech came out of the Atlantic Division.  Clemson holds the tiebreaker over Boston College, while Maryland holds the tiebreaker over Clemson.  What if the season were to unfold this way:

Middle Tennessee State (Win)

Georgia Tech (Loss)

Boston College (Win)

TCU (Loss)

Maryland (Loss)

Wake Forest (Win)

Miami (Loss)

Coastal Carolina (Win)

Florida State (Win)

NC State (Win)

Virginia (Loss)

“The” USC (Loss)

That would leave Clemson with a 6-6 record overall and 4-4 in the ACC.  We would hold the tiebreaker over every other Atlantic Division team with the exception of Maryland, which means that the Clemson Tigers could be your ACC Atlantic Division Champion.  This is particularly within the realm of possibility because no Atlantic team has beaten a Coastal team this year, and no Atlantic team has won an ACC road game.  But don’t chill the Zima just yet.

Clemson would have a .500 record, which raises the stakes in the ACC championship game.  If Clemson wins, we will be heading to Miami in the new year to play in the Orange Bowl for the first time since 1982.  If Clemson loses, we will have a losing record and will not be bowl eligible for the first time since the halcyon 1998 season, when Torry Holt torched Alex Ardley and company for four touchdowns in one game, and we kicked Tommy West to the curb – at least we had good weather, unlike this year.

But can Clemson really be ineligible for bowl selection by losing the ACC Championship Game?  Say it ain’t so!  Here is the relevant part of NCAA Bylaw 30.9.2.1 Exceptions:

“During a season in which an institution competes in 13 regular season contests, the institution must establish a record of seven wins, six losses or better to qualify for bowl selection.”

I have not found where the rules speak directly to this, but this clause leads me to believe that the ACC Championship Game would count towards the 13 regular season contests, because only bowl games are counted as non-regular season contests for FBS schools.

Can you imagine what a kick in the groin this nightmare scenario would be?  The mountains would stop yawning their greatness.  Dabo would use his house language.  Spiller would transfer to Florida, even though he doesn’t have any eligibility left.  It would take the zippity out of my doo da.

The nightmare scenario would create a need for a rule interpretation that no one ever anticipated.  I think it’s fair to say that ACC Commissioner John Swofford didn’t have this in mind when the ACC expanded and added a championship game.  I also don’t think he expected every wine-and-cheese-no-traveling-snooty-demeanor-lucky-team to become unexpectedly dominant (except for UNC.)  Talk about being born on third and thinking you hit a triple.  Clemson fans like me have flagellated ourselves for unknown sins since 1991; ACC Championship Games just fall out of the sky on other fan bases without prayer and supplication.  Expect convulsive fits from Swofford if BC or Wake go back to the ACC Championship Game.

Switching gears, I feel the need to address the fight that Dabo had with Billy Napier last Wednesday.  In his press conference Dabo downplayed the fight, and several top secret sources of mine have insisted that the fight was largely staged to motivate the team.  Putting on our thinking caps, is it credible to believe that the head coach and offensive coordinator would stage a yelling match on the day that Tiger Band was invited to practice?

Premeditated or not, some think that a Wednesday fight might make a great Clemson tradition.  Other Clemson traditions have humble origins.  Running down the hill was the shortest way to the sidelines from the locker room in Fike Field House.  Howard’s Rock was a doorstop.  If we beat Wake, then the Wednesday Fight could be a lively weekly event, and if we don’t start winning more, then the Wednesday Fight could warrant more interest than what happens on Saturdays.

What’s that you say?  I can’t chill the Zima because they don’t make Zima anymore?  Not to worry, I’ve saved a case of Zima for the next ACC Championship.  Unfortunately, I’ve had it for a very…very…very…very long time.

Please send fawning emails to sectionHrowJ@gmail.com and visit www.clemsontigernation.com.

What Happened to all the Offensive Talent?

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

I know that all Clemson fans are just as frustrated with our offense as I am.  I have heard 500 suggestions to fix our scoring woes, and I won’t pretend that I have all the answers, but a lot of my frustration comes from the plethora of alleged talent that we have on offense.  Let’s take a stroll through the depth chart and think of signing days past.  Here was the buzz from fans, Tigernet, and other fan sites surrounding our 2009 offensive contributors when they were seniors in high school:

Offensive Line

Cory Lambert — Big time offensive line recruit out of Greenville.  I met a guy associated with Lambert’s high school athletic department a few years ago.  In short, he told me that Cory Lambert was Anthony Munoz reborn.  He may have been biased.

Landon Walker — Big time offensive line recruit out of North Carolina.  Best offensive lineman at the Shrine Bowl that I attended his senior year, though Stanley Hunter stole the show.

Antoine McClain — Huge steal out of Alabama.

Mason Cloy — One of the top center prospects in the country.  I was told he picked Clemson over Georgia Tech because there’s no good fishing around Atlanta, but this is unconfirmed.

Thomas Austin — Some said he was the next Stacy Long.

Chris Hairston — Ironically, under the radar and overshadowed by Jamal Medlin, perhaps because Medlin was an instate prospect.

Running Backs

C.J. Spiller — We hugged, shouted, and ran around my office when he committed to us on signing day.

Jamie Harper — A “special, special guy” out of Florida, said our recruiting coordinator.

Andre Ellington — Highly thought of, but not as much as Spiller and Harper.

Wide Receivers

Jacoby Ford — The whole world was talking about a hand-timed sub 4.2 second 40.

Xavier Dye — Prized recruit.   Got a lot of word of mouth on the internet because so many fans knew him from Byrnes High School and his conflict with the High School League.

Brandon Clear — Quality recruit, but fans knew little about him.

Brandon Ford — A four star guy out of Anderson.

Jaron Brown — Quality recruit, but fans knew little about him.

Marquan Jones — You can’t score eight touchdowns in a high school playoff game in South Carolina and be considered a sleeper, even if the game was against Blue Ridge.

Terrance Ashe — Walk-on.

Tight Ends/Fullbacks

Michael Palmer — Little known recruit who has overachieved.

Rendrick Taylor — The Beast (who was markedly quicker when under 250 lbs.)

Chad Diehl — A tough guy out of the Byrnes High School system.

Dwayne Allen — Georgia thought they had this big time recruit in the bag.  Well, zoink!

Quarterbacks

Kyle Parker — Not just anybody goes to the Elite 11 camp in California.

Willy Korn — Purported to defecate golden bricks.

If you look at this group, I would say that we expected most of these guys to bring the lumber on Saturdays, though I thought Michael Palmer, Terrance Ashe, and Chris Hairston would end up buried on the depth chart.  Obviously they have been more productive than I anticipated.

Tommy Bowden once said (after our recruiting improved in 2005 and thereafter) that somebody was going to do a lot of winning with talent like this.  He also said that he wanted to burn redshirts and play this talent as freshmen, because he didn’t want to stockpile talent “for the next guy.”

Well, guess what?  We now have “the next guy” as our coach.  And we’re 2-3 with only 2 touchdowns scored in our last 13 quarters.  Frustration.  Clemson’s offensive execution has not been very good, but shouldn’t we be doing a little better than this when we have highly recruited players wearing orange?

You can point to scheme problems and lack of player development, which comes back to coaching by this staff and the last, but it may be more complicated than that.  Clemson seems to be struggling to find itself in the same way that N.C. State and Florida State are right now.  I don’t have a clear answer, only frustration.

One thing is certain.  Our coaches have until 17 October to figure out how to get a win against Wake Forest, or Clemson will increasingly be known for the only things we have left to take pride in – tailgating and beating the fool out of South Carolina.

Please send fawning emails to sectionHrowJ@gmail.com and visit www.clemsontigernation.com.

Napier’s fate may be sealed…

Saturday, October 10th, 2009


With the suggestions of Swinney overruling playcalling, my post as well as others have forced some of the beatwriters to ask Napier and Swinney about who is really calling the plays. David Hood talked with Swinney and he said this:

Swinney has come under fire for taking too much of a hand in the play-calling, and that the efforts of Swinney trying to co-coordinate with offensive coordinator Billy Napier are hurting the effort, but Swinney says he has very little input in the actual play calls.

“I am not calling plays,” Swinney said. “Occasionally, I might get asked to make a suggestion, but I am more in trying to manage the game. It might be a situation where I am asked, in a certain spot, do we want to be more aggressive or more conservative, that kind of thing. But I am not calling plays.”

Coach Napier, when questioned by Larry Williams, said Swinney was calling “a couple a game.” The questions Napier faced at his news conference from the other writers were total softballs. Not one of them questioned it. He also said “Maryland has just gotten better” when asked about our 81 rushing yards against a porous defense, and they had committed to stopping the run like BC did.

That seals Napier’s fate to me, even if I think Swinney is exerting more control over the gameplan, and that is affecting these calls. Swinney has been up front about enough things that I’ll take him at his word on this for the time being. If the offense does not improve, we will be calling for some changes on this staff come December.

Also, with the suggestion that we arent doing enough to improve our WR corps by giving them chances to catch the ball in space, and attacking the seams over the middle with the TE:

One reason for the lack of points on offense is the lack of production from a young wide receiving corps, and it has been suggested that the effort to get the ball into the hands of playmakers C.J. Spiller and Jacoby Ford, and as a result a lack of touches by the group, has halted their growth.

“Some of it is that,” Swinney said. “A lot of it is just poor execution more than anything. At Maryland, we had a young wideout who had practiced great all week, and then he dropped two balls and had a holding call. That is frustrating. You have to go back to the little things, and focus on the execution. Yeah, we have a lot of young guys, and we have to do a better job of giving them more opportunities.”

He also went on to say that the offense would be simplified considerably, which shouldve been done ALREADY with a young QB and WRs. I thought they did that this offseason? 25% of our possessions have netted 2 yards or less for Christ’s sake. I would not give this team a single play that they don’t execute in practice 20 times in a row perfectly. We should pare it down to about 30 plays altogether and tinker with formations more than anything…not until they prove they can get the job done. Its bad enough to watch without hearing yet another reference to how DABO is like DANNY.

I will only say one thing, if we lose to Wake Forest with two weeks to prepare, then Dabo will never get another comparison to Ford this year.