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Welcome to the offseason

Monday, January 9th, 2012

I have to hand it to this coaching staff. Who would have thought that the team could win the conference for the first time in two decades and simultaneously leave the impression that things are not moving in the right direction? What a disaster the Orange Bowl was! Rather than procrastinate on another post, I’ll leave this short one.

I’ve often defended the Clemson defense. For years they have played well, for the most part, despite whatever crap they are given by the offense. I was even willing to do the same this year. Was willing. After the bowl game I took a closer look. The defense stinks.

Here are a few stats to keep in mind:

  • In terms of yards per play, the defense went from 4.8 last season to 5.6 this season.
  • In terms of yards per game, the defense went from 320 to 394.
  • In terms of touchdowns per game, the team went from 2.1 to 3.7.
  • In terms of rank in total defense, the team went from 19th to 71st.
  • In terms of rank in scoring defense, the team went from 13th to 81st.

From that stats I could find, those are just about the the worst team rankings since at least 1989, which is the furthest back I could find stats on the NCAA’s website. I have to imagine the defense was pretty good for the rest of the 80′s. The only year that even remotely compared to this season was 2001. That year, Reggie Herring’s defense ranked 71st in total defense and 79th in scoring defense. Reggie Herring was fired after that season. Comparatively, we’ve had pretty good defenses post 2001, especially post John Lovett’s first season in 2002. That makes this year’s performance a major regression.

Looking at all this, I really miss Vic Koenning, and I’m frankly a bit worried since his new job is at UNC. I’m also not saying that Kevin Steele should be fired (although I am saying that precedent would justify his being fired). But I will say that if any other schools want him, and he’s willing to go on his own, then we shouldn’t stop him.

Posted in Clemson, Football | No Comments »

Head Injury PSA

Sunday, October 2nd, 2011

Seeing Bashaud Breeland go down last night with a concussion, I was reminded of a story I read a couple years ago. There are some cues — outside of the hit itself — that can provide quick evidence that someone has experienced a severe head injury, probably a concussion. This can be particularly useful for coaches, players, and trainers… or pretty much anyone, actually.

Led by Jonathan Lifshitz, assistant professor in the UK Spinal Cord & Brain Injury Research Center, the team was collecting data to document a visible, involuntary response to head trauma. Their findings could have immediate value in helping coaches make educated, objective decisions about whether to return an athlete to play after a blow to the head…

Lifshitz describes the response, dubbed the “fencing response,” as a forearm posture that resembles the en garde position in competitive sword fighting. It also can appear as a defensive boxing pose. The fencing response – which has also been observed in rats under experimental conditions – indicates damage to blood vessels and neurons in a critical brainstem region that controls balance, Lifshitz said.

In the course of their research, the team reviewed some 2,000 “knockout” videos on YouTube, eventually narrowing their sample to three dozen that showed moderate-to-severe impacts to the head, where the person receiving the blow did not immediately get up. Of those, two-thirds exhibited a clear fencing response. The response was noted particularly in football and mixed martial arts, Lifshitz said.

“The fencing response frequently takes place before the player even hits the ground,” Lifshitz said.

Among the videos the team reviewed was the head-to-head collision of Baltimore Raven Willis McGahee and Pittsburgh Steeler Ryan Clark in a Jan. 18 AFC playoff game. McGahee’s immediate fencing response is clearly visible in the video.

Moderate-to-severe head trauma can cause permanent brain damage or death if ignored by medical staff. Unfortunately, sometimes these injuries are not readily apparent. The fencing response provides an immediate visual cue that could help injured players get the attention they need, Lifshitz said.

“The observation of the fencing response can help coaches and trainers make immediate and future return-to-play decisions,” Lifshitz said. “But the response is not universal. The absence of a fencing response should not be taken as a sign that no injury has occurred.”

Here’s the McGahee-Clark collision.

Here’s a similar example with a hit on Georgia’s Mario Raley.

For those who want to watch a replay of the hit on Breeland, I don’t know any youtube clips, but the play began with 2:12 left in the first quarter. That is about the start of minute 38 of the replay broadcast on ESPN3.

Addendum
Another good example: Cal’s Jahvid Best against Oregon State in 2009.

Posted in Clemson, Football, Virginia Tech | No Comments »

Clemson, FSU, and Virginia Tech

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

Due to a wedding involving a Miami alum, I was unable to see the live broadcast of Clemson-FSU. Leave it to Miami fans to make college football less enjoyable for everyone else. Fortunately, due to the beauty of ESPN3, I was able to watch a replay during the week when I was stuck at work late. Unfortunately, despite the outcome, I wasn’t entirely impressed by the game against FSU. The FSU game doesn’t give me a lot of confidence going into the Tech game. However there may be some upside out there for Clemson.

On the downside for Clemson…

Clemson beat FSU by 5 point in Clemson. And FSU was missing many of their starting offensive skill players. And FSU gave a lot away to Clemson in the way of many stupid penalties (so many I lost count).

Now Clemson has to go on the road, in a tough place to play, to face a team that’s actually pretty tough to beat regardless of location. This is the first road trip for Clemson’s talented true freshman. I’m not aware (not that I’ve really checked) of important injuries to Virginia Tech. And it seems unlikely that VT is going to provide a lot of freebies in the way of stupid penalties and turnovers. For all these reason, there’s a very good reason why VT is favored by 7 points.

On the upside for Clemson…

Clemson is still the underdog. I feel like Clemson plays better (not that they necessarily win) when they are the underdog.

Tonight at 6 we’ll see what happens.

Posted in Clemson, Florida State, Football, Virginia Tech | No Comments »

Pleased

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Pleased is actually an understatement. Three weeks in, I’m happier than I expected to be at this point in the season. A few thoughts:

I don’t like have close games against nobody competition (regardless of what league they won last season). However I do understand that there was a lot of new everything this year (QB, receivers, OC, etc) and that it’s good to save things for the real games.

Against Auburn, I would have liked for Clemson to dominate the entire game. Clearly. Nonetheless, it was nice to see the ACC Tigers take control of the game and maintain that control until the final whistle. It’s so much better than getting off to a quick lead early in the game only to see that lead get erased in the closing minutes of the game.

3-0 is good, but Clemson still has no wins in the ACC. In other words, the meaningful season has yet to begin. And by the way, I expect Death Valley will be rocking on Saturday. Unfortunately I won’t be around due to a wedding.

The ACC is expanding, again. Frankly I’d rather the ACC be a 9 or maybe 10 team league. I like being able to play everyone in the league each season. It seems to me that super-conference divisions will basically just be old-style conferences. In the end, it seems to me we’re just remixing and renaming things. Yawn. (side note:, I hope Texas gets screwed.) Not that I particularly care for Syracuse or Pitt (actually, Pitt? really?), but I think it best serves Clemson by having beatable competition than having to face-off week after week against world beaters. Said differently, FSU, Miami, and VT would probably be nobodies if they had each joined the SEC 20 years ago. Said a third way, the major conferences have plenty of teams with mediocre results; perhaps not the preferred destination for a school seeking to improve on a decade’s worth of mediocre results. Although I readily admit I have zero desire to see games in Pittsburgh or Syracuse.

Posted in ACC, Clemson, Football | No Comments »

Mr. “All-in” hedges his bets.

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

In case you hadn’t heard, Billy Napier and Andre Powell have been fired.

I think the title of this post pretty much says it all.

The Dabo Swinney era is over. Unfortunately we have to endure the remaining year of it.

Posted in Clemson, Football | Comments Off

Like a microcosm of the season

Friday, December 31st, 2010

Kicker can’t hit kicks

Offense stalls in the redzone.

Parker throws an ill-advised pass – across his body – that results in an interception… yada yada yada

I’m so glad we went with “our best chance to win” Parker as the starter… so that we could get an unproductive half of football out of him before he broke a rib and was out for the rest of the game. Unfortunately for Dabo, his team performed far worse than he expected through the latter part of the season, which gave him zero return on his investment in Parker.

With this loss, I’m definitely wishing, as I had before, that we had gone to a much worse bowl to “a) punish the players for their piss poor performance this season, b) hopefully not even be noticed by anybody, and c) to play a team we might actually be able to beat.”

This season would have been much more tolerable if it had been labeled a “rebuilding” year from the start. That would have set necessary level for expectations. As well, it would have given sufficient reason to get Boyd more reps.

Posted in Clemson, Football | Comments Off

James Davis Update

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

James Davis was waived by the Browns earlier this week. It looks like he’ll be signing on with the ‘Skins.

The team is expected to add to its practice squad second-year running back James Davis, who was released earlier this week by the Cleveland Browns. It was not immediately clear whose roster spot Davis would be taking. The Redskins had signed running back Jeremiah Johnson to the practice squad one day earlier.

Good luck, James!

Posted in Football, Tigers in the Pros | Comments Off

A further note on the Nighthawks:

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

From The Tribune

The largest crowd in UFL history, 23,067 fans, came out to witness the premiere of Omaha, Nebraska’s first professional football team after the state became nationally recognised for its mass following of the NCAA University of Nebraska Cornhuskers football programme.

Aside from the biggest crowd, the Nighthawks’ Rosenblatt Stadium was also the home to one of the most spectacular games in the brief history of the league.

Omaha scored their first touchdown in franchise history on a pass from Garcia to fullback Rendrick Taylor to tie the game, 7-7.

Not too shabby.

The Nighthawks next play Sacramento at Rosenblatt Stadium. Gametime is 8:30 PM EDT, viewable on HDNET.

Posted in Football, Manbearpig, Tigers in the Pros | 1 Comment »

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