Midseason Ponderings
by Jim Alderson, 10/13/04
One
thing about this 2004 Virginia Tech football team is that they sure keep it
interesting. For the third straight week, any thoughts held by fans of perhaps
leaving during the fourth quarter and getting back to the tailgating were
erased, as Tech and yet another opponent battled right down to the wire. Such
was the case with Wake Forest as the gritty Deacons battled right to the end,
and it took four straight incomplete passes from point-blank range before Hokie
fans could exhale and go check out the Dixie Classic Fair. Or at least those
portions of it that could be seen from the Joel Coliseum parking lot.
The good news in this season of the last-second
finish is that for the second straight week Tech held on to win. The better news
is that Bud Foster’s defense, so maligned during last season’s late
collapse, has strung together two straight late defensive stands, enabling Tech
to come away with wins. The not-so-hot news is that Tech’s offense continues
to struggle, displaying an altogether annoying habit of red zone gaffes that
keep Tech from piecing together any sort of comfortable lead and not turning end
games into a series of Maalox moments. The offense is not doing anything easily,
and it appears that the offense is going to be what the offense is. This is a
bunch with a quarterback with the heart of a lion and, well, the heart of a
lion.
It is also an offense where confusion reigns
along the offensive line, contains a platoon of freshman wide receivers making
freshman mistakes that shine brightly against experienced secondaries, also has
a fullback position staffed entirely by freshmen whose inexperience has caused
the position to be so weak that it can be considered useless, and lacks the stud
running back that can carry a team, the likes of which Tech fans had become
accustomed to observing for the last four years. There is no Jake Grove to
anchor the o-line, no Ernest Willford to make the clutch catch and no Doug
Easlick to lead block for a Kevin Jones who could place the entire team on his
back. It also appears that there were no ready replacements for any of them. The
recruiting junkies can ponder exactly how all of this came about, but it adds up
to an offense that struggles and will probably continue to until some
experienced quality players are more than lightly sprinkled through the depth
chart.
For all of the offense’s offensiveness,
however, Tech has won two games in a row. The bottom line is always the bottom
line, and Tech’s most recent one is that they have prevailed in two close,
hard-fought contests. Losing those types of games has been a problem for Tech.
There is now solid evidence available indicating that this Tech team, unlike
those of recent vintage, is learning how to win those games. That could be handy
knowledge to have, as a glance at the remaining schedule after this week’s
throwaway game would indicate more close contests are in the offing.
This first season of the Tech and Miami-expanded
ACC is turning into a doozy. Photo finishes are the norm, beginning with the
fourth quarter collapse by Florida State against Miami. For all of Tech’s
close finishes, NC State can go us one better. The Wolfpack have followed up
their narrow, last-second Lane Stadium escape with an overtime win over Wake
Forest and last Saturday’s near-miss at North Carolina that left the
full-figured Chuck Amato positively jiggling as he bounced up and down in front
of the referees attempting to convince them, one way or another, that TA
McClendon had indeed scored. Neither Amato’s arguments nor his burlesque show
worked.
Amato has it easy, however. Even as Chuck
manfully voiced instructions to his team to put the Carolina loss behind them
and direct their attention to a Maryland team that Amato couldn’t beat with
Philip Rivers, Wake Forest coach Jim Grobe must be wondering exactly what his
guys have to do to get a win in this brave new ACC. The Deacons could
conceivably be 6-0 and the nation’s darling, but instead are 3-3, 0-3 in
league play, joining Duke at the bottom of the expanded conference. While Wake
and Duke together at the bottom of the conference standings is not exactly a new
ACC phenomena, the Deacons are there with two OT losses and a tough one against
Tech. They can be forgiven for expecting a little better.
Glancing around the rest of our new conference at
this roughly mid-way point of the season, there is certainly no surprise at the
top of the league. Welcome to Miami, ACC. The Canes might have been the
beneficiaries of a ‘Welcome to the ACC’ gift from Florida State in their
opener, and it never hurts the record when you replace Tennessee with Houston on
the schedule, but there they sit in their usual spot high up in the polls. With
a win at Georgia Tech under their belts, Miami seems to be adjusting well to
their new surroundings, although upcoming trips to Raleigh and Hooville might
prove a little more difficult than those to, say, New Jersey and Pittsburgh.
Joining the Canes at the top of the midseason ACC
standings are the Hoos. This is a pretty good team, although the suspicion
persists that the main reason for that lofty ranking is some creative
scheduling, the same sort that enabled Tech over the years to rocket up the
polls. It also remains to be seen what will happen if somebody manages to shut
down that ground game that up until now has proven so overpowering and forces
quarterback Marces Hagans to win with his arm. There are teams on the Hoos’
remaining schedule, beginning this Saturday, that can do just that.
Florida State has the manpower to match up with
that Hoo line that has received little resistance in brushing aside the likes of
Akron and Temple. The ‘Noles are coming off a narrow victory in what Bobby
Bowden referred to as that ‘dadgum dome’ at Syracuse. Frank Beamer has used
more colorful language when speaking of the Carrier Dome. It hasn’t been many
times since FSU joined the ACC that they have found themselves staring up the
standings at the rest of the league following their very first game. Considering
the utter futility Booby’s team has experienced against the Canes [it’s not
everybody that can manage to lose to one team six times in five years - Texas
would have to meet Oklahoma in a bowl game to replicate it], what were they
expecting when they invited the Canes? Turning their annual OOC loss to Miami
into a conference one does not bode well for another FSU BCS bid, but
quarterback goofiness aside, this is still a pretty good team.
Georgia Tech has become the leading candidate for
the ACC‘s ‘Go Figure’ award. This is a group that can lose at Carolina and
win at Maryland. This is also a group that has a very good defense that can shut
Virginia Tech down and give the Hokie defense some problems with quarterback
Reggie Ball. It should be an interesting Thursday night in Atlanta.
Maryland is a team that last Saturday had a huge
dose of ‘Uh-oh’ injected into their season. Not too many people figured the
Terps to lose at home last weekend to GT, certainly nobody in the group with
whom I pick. Maryland is now 3-2 and has remaining on their slate a home game
with FSU plus back-to-back road trips to Hooville and Lane Stadium, the latter
on a Thursday night. Lots of luck in keeping that string of ten-win seasons
going, Ralph.
The surprise team in the ACC has to be North
Carolina. Don’t look now but the Heels are 3-3, 2-2 in the ACC. It’s amazing
what can be accomplished when the job prospects of the coach are slammed as
tightly against a Kenan Stadium wall as were those of John Bunting. The folks in
licensing at Carolina are having to hold off selling those light blue visors, at
least for a while. The dramatic win over State has loosened the alumni grip
around the neck of the good guy Bunting, at least until those upcoming games
against Utah, Miami and Tech.
The flip side of Carolina’s surprise upside are the Clemson Tigers. When the
Bowden family gathers this Thanksgiving, Tommy will no doubt give special thanks
to Daddy for that game last year which allowed Tommy to pad his buyout by $4
extra large. Then he can gripe at him for not being so obliging this year. The
Tigers are 1-4 with a trip remaining to Miami.
At the bottom of the ACC sits Duke. All of the
hoopla and optimism surrounding the hiring of new coach Ted Roof lasted for
about the first half of Duke’s opening game against Navy, then things got back
to normal. At least basketball practice starts this week.
And so we sit back and take a breather at this
halfway point of Tech’s inaugural ACC football season. Close games have been
the norm, and there look to be more to come. There is nothing guaranteed here,
even the continuation of Tech’s bowl streak. One thing is for certain,
however: this is a lot of fun and beats the heck out of what we might be
contemplating were Tech still stuck in the Li’l E.
TSL Pass Home
TSL Home
|