Saturday, October 26, 2013

So There Has Been A Lot of Departures.....

This has been called a transition year for Rutgers, and that apparently not only applies to their conference affiliation, but their roster as well. Through out the season, there have been numerous departures, and while it may not effect the starting line up or the two deep much, it hurts the team's overall depth, and trickles down to the practice squad, where the starters won't get as good of a look practicing as they should.

The most notable departure is that of former starting corner back Ian Thomas, who has decided to quit football and pursue a baseball career. This is peculiar not only because he decided this in the middle of the season, but because he didn't even play baseball in high school. I won't fault a guy for making this type of decision, football is really hard and if he has any prospects of turning pro in baseball at all he is better off doing that, but this leaves Rutgers in a major bind. Corner was already a weakness coming into the season, and his departue combined with Lew Toller's season ending injury leaves just Gareef Glashen, two true freshman and a bunch of back up safeties as their depth at corner. His absence also leaves the position as a question mark in the future too.

Also leaving is defensive tackle Al Page. Page wasn't playing a whole lot, but he made the most of his limited opportunities and was an injury away from being thrust into the line up. This leaves the Knights with less depth at a position where depth is arguably the most important.

The other two transfers are runningback Dontea Ayers and offensive guard Marquise Wright. Ayers probably saw the writing on the wall that he was going to be burried on the depth chart because of the emergence of Justin Goodwin and the three runinng backs committed as part of Rutgers' 2014 recruiting class. Wright recently moved to guard from defensive tackle, but he was not listed on the two deep and probably never really had a chance to start next year.

Defensive linemen Myles Jackson and Jamil Pollard have also had to call it a career, due to injuries.

According to my unofficial count, Rutgers now has only 77 players on scholarship. That may not seem like a problem, but you need a strong roster from top to bottom, and they are getting dangerously thin at the bottom. The silver lining here is that they won't have as bad of a scholarship crunch when they welcome in their colossal 2014 recruiting class.

Sloppy Play Does Rutgers in Against Louisville (Again)

I went into this game fully expecting Rutgers to lose, yet I still managed to get infuriated while watching it between Reece Davis, Jesse Palmer and David Pollack talk about Louisville's national title chances (LOL).The Scarlet Knights played very poorly on both offense and defense, as they dropped the Thursday night contest on the road to the paper tiger Louisville Cardinals 24-10.

When you are facing a quarterback like Teddy Bridgewater, you are going to have to score a lot of points. Rutgers mustered a meager ten points in this game, a season low by far, as the unit was a complete disaster.It was like a 2010 esque nightmare of a performance. Gary Nova threw four interceptions, the offensive line could not pass protect to save their lives, and the running game produced next to nothing.

With Nova, these types of games can unfortunately happen. He had the game against Kent State last year, and he just couldn't take care of the ball in this game. He's a gunslinger; that's who he is. These types of quarterbacks are double edge swords, and he hurt the team for the first time all year after coming up huge for them so many times earlier in the season. He forced a lot of throws through tight windows, and it just was not working. He had no time to throw the ball, and that certainly didn't help matters. I wonder if he put too much pressure on himself thinking he would have to outplay Teddy in order for his team to win. I still have a lot of faith in Nova going forward, but he was just awful in this game, there's no way around it.

Rutgers was also unable to run the ball in this contest, as they looked very much like a team playing on short rest following a triple overtime game. The line could not get much of a push, and the backs were unable to do anything with limited space to run. This was especially unfortunate if you watched Louisville lose to UCF last week, as the Golden Knights won by running it down their throats. If you like playing pointless hypotheticals, you could think the results would have been different if Paul James played, but injuries are part of the game and you have to just deal with it.

The defense only gave up 24 points, which isn't too bad, but they did a whole hell of a lot of bending with out breaking. The secondary predictable got torn to bits by Teddy Bridgewater (he missed quite a few throws and was missing his top receiver too), and more disconcertingly struggled against the run for what feels like the first time in three years. They managed to make some big plays to prevent the Cardinals from putting more points on the board, and gave the offense and opportunity to win, despite not playing well overall.

The red zone defense was very good, but they were in the red zone way too much for my liking. Jeremy Deering made a nice play providing coverage over the top to intercept a pass from Bridgewater in the end zone late in the first half. Jamal Merrell also blocked a kick, and Anthony Cioffi timed a blitz perfectly and sacked Bridgewater while also knocking the ball loose. Dave Milewski had an opportunity to scoop and score after that, but he fell on the ball instead. There was nobody around him, but it's tough to fault a lineman for just falling on top of it,

The star of the game for Rutgers was middle linebacker Steve Longa, who continued to be an explosive play maker on the inside. He burst through the line to make some plays in the back field,and continued to pile up his tackle total.

Rutgers played pretty poorly in this game, and it cost them a chance at an upset (even though the two teams are pretty evenly matched talent wise). Fortunately, UCF's win the following week over Louisville opened the door for Rutgers to win a share of the conference title should they win out.But there's still a long way to go before that.



Thursday, October 10, 2013

Game 6: Louisville

Should have been Gary Nova with that trophy
Last season, Rutgers lost the final game of the regular season to Louisville, in a game that would have sent the Scarlet Knights to the Sugar Bowl had they emerged victorious. Dropped passes, costly turn overs and a very bad call by the officiating crew did Rutgers in, and prevented them from their date with the Florida Gators in the Super Dome. A year prior to that, Rutgers dropped a close contest to the Cardinals, thanks to a pair of chip shot field goal attempts missing. This lost ended up costing the Knights a share of the Big East crown. Two years, two tough losses in games that should have been won.

A year ago, I felt that Rutgers had every advantage going in their favor in their Thursday night contest against Louisville. They were at home. Teddy Bridgewater was playing not only with a broken wrist but a sprained ankle as well. Charlie Strong was rumored to be in the running for the head coaching positions at Auburn and Tennessee. The new Call of Duty game had just been released. None of that stuff ended up mattering though, and Louisville won the game.

This year, everything seems to be going against the Scarlet Knights. They are playing their second road game in five days. They were pushed to triple overtime in their latest contest. And they've dealt with a number of injuries. Maybe they can turn the tables this time, and beat the Cardinals for the first time since 2009.

Charlie Strong's squad has yet to be tested this year. The Cards handled Ohio, Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky, Florida International and Temple with relative easy. All of those games were pretty much over before half time. This is one area the Scarlet Knights could have an edge, Rutgers has played three close games down to the wire, and Louisville might not be ready to play all four quarters.

Another factor working in favor or Rutgers is special teams. Janarion Grant has been a dynamic kick returner this year, and he could change this game with another one of his explosive returns. Nick Marsh is going to be very important as well for Rutgers to win the field position battle. I'm expecting a trick play out of this unit as well. They are going to maybe have to make multiple big plays for Rutgers to win tonight.

On defense, Rutgers will of course face Teddy Bridgewater, who is the best quarterback in the country in my opinion. The Knights' secondary has been torn to shreds by Fresno State and SMU, so they will be facing another tough test tonight. I'm not feeling good about this group, but schematically, Louisville isn't as much of a challenge. Rutgers had trouble with three and four receiver sets since they have stayed in base personnel, but Louisville will run more traditional sets than those two.Also, they are going to attack you more vertically, so the alignment issues and natural picks on short crossing routes won't be as big of a problem. The front seven is going have to continue to get to the quarterback like they have done so often thus far this season. The Cardinals running game should not pose much of a problem for Rutgers.

Offensively, Rutgers is going to have to put a lot of points on the board. Gary Nova has been great so far this year, and he needs to have another big day. Hopefully they can get Leonte Carroo more involved early, and maybe Brandon Coleman will be healthier than he has been so far this season. Pass protection has been some what of a problem this year, and Louisville gets after the quarterback, so some screens and short passes early should be used to try to slow them down. Savon Huggins will start, but I think Justin Goodwin will and should receive the majority of carries. Regardless of who is running, the offensive line is going to need to knock people around up front. It will be intersting to see how they split time at right guard between Chris Muller and Antwan Lowery. Muller has been very good this year, but Lowery received the bulk of playing time last Saturday.

I really hate Louisville and I really, really think the Scarlet Knights have a shot, but I sadly do not see the secondary being able to stop Bridgewater. The offense will score points and it will be closer than the experts think, but ultimatly I think the Scarlet Knights will come up just short.

Rutgers 41 Louisville 44

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Game 5: SMU

Rutgers opens up Big East play for the final time today, as they travel to Dallas to take on the Ponies of SMU.

SMU is not a good team, and Rutgers should be able to push them around up front on both sides of the ball. QB Garret Gilbert is a turn over machine, and I don't think this will be close.

The biggest thing to watch is how the secondary plays against a pass heavy offense in their last tune up before facing Tedddy Bridgewater next week. THis won't be a physical game, and hopefully Rutgers can rest their starters late in the game to get them ready for Thursday's game.

Injuries continue to be a big problem for Rutgers, and Paul James and Jamal Merrell are the to most notable absences today. I'm not saying the next two games will define Savon Huggins career, but they probably will.

Rutgers 41 SMU 17

Rutgers Rallies to Overcome Early Mistakes to Beat Arkansas