Friday, October 24, 2014

BYU at Boise State: Mo's Prediction

Over the past 10 years, (I wouldn't call myself a "Bronco apologist" but) I have come to Bronco's defense when I felt people have been overly harsh.  While I still think some people have unrealistic expectations when it comes to BYU football and Bronco Mendenhall, I am finding that I have two big beefs with Bronco.

1) According to Bronco, BYU has never been beat.  The team just didn't execute at a high enough level.  The coaching staff always had the right plays called.  They always had the players properly trained and prepared.  It was just the personnel that couldn't get the job done.  That's crap.  Some teams have better players, who work just as hard or harder, are coached as well or better: that is a fact of college football.  But BYU has coaches are prone to make mistakes too.  Bronco doesn't ever say that: the players always need to execute at a higher level.  I'm sorry, coach, but you need to coach at a higher level too.  You hold players accountable (or so you say, I don't recall Bronco ever benching anyone for poor "execution" he just talks about the bad execution after the game).  Now it's time to hold Anae and Howell accountable.  Howell needed to get more creative in his blitz packages in games against Houston and Virginia: so say that.  Don't blame the players for not getting to the QB (or not covering on the back end).  Anae should focus more on execution than on speed right now, especially if his current roster of players are having trouble performing at a high level.  He needs to adapt to his personnel: he doesn't have a team captain, veteran leader at QB (or RB, or OL, etc.).  So slow things down a bit, hurry up when necessary.  Adapt.  COACH!

2) Show some passion.  The only time Bronco ever gets excited is when he's talking to national media guys about BYU's program.  When he's lobbying for BYU to get into the P5, or the BCS, the Heisman, or the College Football Playoff he looks giddy.  He talks about special seasons and cracks a smile.  Then he gets on the sidelines and goes all LaVell Edwards stoic.  It's a different game these days than when LaVell roamed the sidelines, these kids, especially at BYU, don't want football to be a business trip.  Make it fun for them.  Interact with them.  Get excited with them and for them.  Yes, a calm demeanor is generally a good thing, but sometimes your team needs a kick in the butt and you need to do it: Taysom isn't there.  Craig Bills is out.  Until some player steps up to be the vocal leader, Bronco needs to find some way to light a fire under these guys.

I think mentally BYU is in a very dangerous place right now.  I thought heading into the season, and especially after the Ole Miss loss, that this isn't a typical Boise State team.  Ole Miss turned out to be a juggernaut though.  Boise has rebounded nicely and played well (excluding the inexplicable loss at Air Force), especially at home.  They have a very balanced offensive attack and have played pretty solid defense.  They have been tough at home, beating a better-than-expected Colorado State team and defeating rival Fresno State by double digits last week.  This is a much more difficult test than I envisioned a month ago, and not just b/c BYU is struggling, but Boise is peaking.

With all that said, Boise State is beatable.  Hedrick is prone to turn it over, registering 8 INTs in the Broncos' two losses.  The offense also relies on him to do a lot of things with his legs.  Add in Ajayi at RB and catching a lot of screens, and so much of their offense relies on those two players.  If one of those guys goes down, that could spell trouble.  Imagine if Taysom Hill and Jamaal Williams both got hurt...oh wait.  The most consistent thing about Boise has been the rushing attack, but it's very Jay Ajayi-focused.  No other player has carried the ball more than 2 times in any game.  Matt Miller is their medium to deep-ball threat, not necessarily because of his speed, but b/c he's like an athletic Mitch Matthews with great hands that runs good routes.  I haven't heard for sure if he will play or not: he has missed the last two games but they thought he'd be ready to go by last week.  Shane Williams-Rhodes is their other WR: he's very flashy and can do great things in space if he can find it.

BYU's D is stout against the run this year.  It will be interesting to see strength-on-strength.  Last year Ajayi had an "average" day against BYU with 150+ yards on 20+ carries.  Most importantly, BYU kept him out of the end zone.  I don't know that they can survive another 150 yards from him.  He's also a great pass catcher and Boise likes those screens.  BYU knows they need to get pressure and have had to blitz to get that done, so screens could hurt BYU, which doesn't play much man coverage, even when it blitzes.  I figure Hedrick is going to throw for at least 200.  If BYU's secondary plays as bad as it has at times this year, he could easily double that number to 400.  So if you add 150 rushing yards to 200 passing yards, Boise should be in the game.  Factor in the home crowd, now getting excited about the team again, and that should give Boise's O a little extra mojo too.  The last time BYU went up to Boise, they held the offense without a TD.  I think Boise's O is better this year and the BYU's D is worse.  I figure that's worth at least 24-31 points for Boise State.

For BYU's O, Jamaal Williams is expected to play, though it's not 100% sure he will, this would be a great, and much needed, addition.  With Mitch Matthews emerging in the passing game, Jordan Leslie still in the wings, and a Christian Stewart/Devin Mahina connection forming, BYU has some things working in the passing game.  Colorado State and Nevada both had a lot of success through the air against Boise's secondary.  Other teams have had great success running the ball against them too.  So this isn't a shutdown defense by any stretch of the imagination.  I normally want to see BYU be a little run-heavy, but I think a balanced approach would serve them well against Boise State.  I don't think 50+ attempts for Christian Stewart is the answer, but, if that's what Anae dials up, I think it reduces BYU's chances of putting a lot of points on the board.  BYU isn't capable of big-play TDs, so they'll need to sustain drives and be able to punch it in once they get to the red zone.  That is easier with a balanced offensive attack, throwing the ball to move the sticks and running the ball to move the scoreboard.  In goal to go situations, Christian Stewart throwing 3 straight fades to Mitch Matthews will end in one of two ways: FG attempt or touchback.  BYU needs balance!

I think it's done though, I just don't think these guys have enough left in the tank to battle Boise for 4 long quarters.  BYU will fight hard for as long as they can, but I think they fall short again, as has been the case with 2 straight 2 TD leads blown in the second half: Boise State 31, BYU 20.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Nevada at BYU: Mo's Reaction

I know I'm a little late on this.  People have dissected the game, people have been disgusted with the outcome of the game, etc.  For me, I'm a little concerned about the direction of the offense (or really the program in general) right now.  Robert Anae's "Go Fast, Go Hard" offensive scheme has basically turned into a Hurry-Up Air Raid offense.  The whole point of Go Fast, Go Hard is to wear teams out.  These are 19-23 year olds BYU is playing: they can run for days.  You can't wear them out by making the DL pass rush and the DBs chase (slow) WRs.  To wear them out you hit them every single play.  This is why Navy can still pull off a few upsets every now and again: 11 guys hit 11 guys on every play.  Go Fast, Go Hard works when you run the ball a lot and when you pass the ball effectively.  It doesn't work as well if you pass the ball a lot and run the ball effectively.  You can't run 30 more plays and gain 190 more yards and lose time of possession by 6 minutes.  Two of the 3 4th quarter turnovers against Nevada were on called pass plays.  When you have a running game that can be dominant against an inferior opponent, you have to use it early, often, and to the end.

I understand that BYU is really short on RBs right now.  It destroys some confidence from Anae in the running game.  I get that.  However, the RBs averaged 7 yards/carry against Nevada last weekend.  Nate Carter averaged over 12/carry.  Nate Carter.  Even Toloa'i Ho Ching got his first action of the season in a blocking role this past Saturday.  But what I see is the OL is actually coming together in the run-blocking these past few games, just as the number of carries is plummeting.

Robert Anae called 102 offensive plays.  He called 77 pass plays and 25 run plays. Christian Stewart was sacked 6 times and scrambled 8 times, bringing a little balance to the final numbers (63 pass attempts and 39 rushes).  That means he is not comfortable in the pocket on 18% of pass plays.  On the 63 plays he did throw the ball, he completed 62% of his passes, averaging 10.5 yards/completion.  There was one designed running play the entire game that got 0 yards or less (and that was really a broken play).  So there is a 96% chance of positive yardage against Nevada if we run the ball.  Contrast that with passing the ball: you have a 39% of 0 yards or fewer (and an 18% chance of your QB running for his life).  At some point, Anae has to look at the percentages, and they say to RUN THE BALL 3/4 OF THE TIME INSTEAD OF 1/4.  Even if he wasn't looking at the percentages: BYU was ahead by 15 points in the second half!  Run the ball!  Go Medium, Go Hard...eat clock, wear them down, kill their morale.

77 called passes would have been awesome if Steve Sarkisian was throwing to Kaipo Maguire, Ben Cahoon, James Dye, KO Kealaluhi, Chad Lewis, Itula Mili, and Ronney Jenkins.  77 with Christian Stewart to Mitch Matthews, Jordan Leslie, and Paul Lasike?  That kind of stupidity earns you a loss to a 3-3 middle-of-the-road MWC team.  Just a few weeks after Bronco proclaimed that a 4-0 start and beat-down of Texas proved BYU was ready for a P5 league, BYU lost 3 straight games to G5 schools: 2 of them at home.  And they aren't out of the woods yet either.  If BYU loses to Boise and beats UNLV, they will be 1-3 against the MWC: that would place them at the bottom of either division if they were still in the conference.

Analyze away all you want.  The reason BYU lost to Nevada was the number 7.  Only 7 carries for a guy averaging 12 yards/carry.  And 77 called pass plays when the run-blocking was as dominant as it has been this season since the Texas 2nd half.  I said before the season started, I felt BYU needed 10 wins or they lose the fan base.  That would require them to win out, including a bowl game.  That won't happen until BYU starts running the football for 4 quarters.  If it was good enough to beat Texas, it would have been good enough to beat Utah State, UCF, and Nevada.  But we are left with 77 called pass plays, two 4th quarter rushes against UCF in a game we led by 2 TDs, and a complete abandoning of the running game against Utah State in the 3rd quarter.

Run.  The.  Football.  For 4 quarters.  Run it with Nate Carter.  Bring Alisa back to offense (if Utah State can bring a LB with zero career carries over and put on a display, surely a former college RB can give you something).  Put Trey Dye in the backfield (Stewart can tell him which way the play is going if he doesn't know the playbook).  Just pound the football.  Or lose.  Plain and simple.  And I'm not just talking about the game.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Nevada at BYU: Mo's Prediction

BYU has been having all kinds of trouble in pass defense the past 4 games, having given up four consecutive 300-yard passing games for the first time in the Bronco Mendenhall era.  In their defense, Houston didn't even try to run the ball.  In their disgrace, Utah State got to over 300 yards in only 25 attempts.  The next two games they face seasoned, senior QBs.

Cody Fajardo comes in averaging 234 yards/game this season, completing 62% of his passes.  Tomorrow will be making his 37th career start, and 15th career road start, against BYU.  Last season against BYU, he had a bit of a ho-hum game: 22-31 for 256 yards and 3 TDs.  Does anybody believe this year's BYU Pass D is better than last year's?  They really haven't been getting to the QB, they haven't been covering well down the field, and they always give up short throws on the outside.  Fajardo is also mobile so if Takitaki abandons his contain assignment to rush up the middle, Fajardo will get to the edge and make the Cougar defense pay.

Three weeks ago, it looked like BYU and Utah were both back to what they had done best for the past decade under their respective coaches.  BYU was scoring a lot of points, playing solid defense, and not killing themselves on special teams.  Utah was playing opportunistic defense, not beating themselves with turnovers on offense, and utilizing special teams and trick plays to put points on the board.  BYU was beating teams it was supposed to beat, Utah was combining stunning victories with baffling defeats.  One of the teams is still being true to themselves, the other is BYU.

BYU's defense hasn't been able to make plays on first or third downs.  Even when they play well on first and second down, they don't seem to have the ability to get a stop on third and long.  Teams have moved the ball up and down the field, in chunks or in drives, whatever the offense needs to do, it could.  What was supposed to be the most talented and deepest BYU defense ever stopped playing well in the 2nd quarter against Houston, then had a couple of guys get hurt, and now can't really stop anything or anyone.  They don't look talented and they don't look deep.  They look physical, they look big, strong, and fast, but they don't look competent.

Nevada, like Utah State, is not a good team.  They thrive on playing a unique brand of offense that always keeps opponents guessing, especially those that aren't fundamentally sound (a hallmark of BYU defenses under Bronco Mendenhall until this year).  It isn't flashy, it isn't done on the backs of a massive OL, or made possible by a lot of play makers.  But they have been getting the job done on offense, at least keeping the team in the game.

Defensively, they haven't been.  But the Cougars O has left a lot to be desired, even when Taysom was healthy.  BYU has had some time to rest, recover, and regroup after two consecutive weeknight games.  They need to get back to establishing the run game.  Anae desires his go-fast-go-hard offense to be a physical rushing attack designed to wear opponents out.  But outside the first 2.5 games, it has been obnoxiously balanced, or even pass-heavy.  If they want to overpower a smaller defensive front, the Cougars need to come out running the football straight at the defense.  This was the game plan against Texas.  Against a BIGGER defensive front.  It worked beautifully.  But it really hasn't been in the game plans since then.

Jamaal Williams has been averaging over 5 yards/carry on the season.  Those stats aren't skewed with a couple of big long TD runs.  He averages 5.2 yards/carry: give him the ball twice and it's a first down.  Yet he had 13 carries against Virginia and 16 against Utah State.  I realize he's not 100% now, but he was in the Utah State loss.  Another baffling stat to me is that Adam Hine, who by all appearances is one of the fastest guys on the team and is trusted to return kickoffs, yet he is on pace to have the same amount of carries as he did last year.  I didn't even know he had ANY carries last season!  I realize he's not 100% either (and may not play against Nevada), but he was the rest of the season.  Algie Brown: averaging 5 yards/carry.  He only has 29 carries on the season (thanks to 22 carries in the two games without Jamaal Williams). 3 great backs and a solid rushing attack, and yet BYU couldn't find a way to run the ball in the 4th quarter or in OT against UCF.  They didn't even attempt it.  [Probably b/c it wasn't a consistent attack so the D was still somewhat fresh in the 4th Q.]

I realize Anae wants to show confidence in Stewart and he wanted to let the country know that Taysom Hill could throw/win a Heisman, but run the dang ball.  Run it often.  Have an identity.  Be a physical, bruising, running football team.  That will give Stewart bigger and better throwing lanes and THAT will give him confidence.  To me, just from a personnel standpoint, that was the obvious thing to do.  It is only magnified by the struggles the defense has been having.  BYU lost the time of possession battle 2-1 against Virginia and BYU came out throwing again the next game...I understand it's not always the easiest thing to make an adjustment mid-game.  But there was a bye week and a loss to get your head out of your butt and see what the team needed to happen.  Anae should know better and Bronco should ABSOLUTELY know better as a defensive-minded coach!

Against UCF, BYU ran zone read with a non-running QB, then threw two incompletions and punted.  Multiple times.  Right out of the gate!  They need to establish the run.  Or else Nevada will throw for 350 yards and put up 6 or 7 scores.

My prediction for this game: Nevada will throw for 350 yards and put up 6 or 7 scores.  Christian Stewart will throw the ball 50 times, to just 25 rushes.  BYU will lose in excruciating fashion.  At homecoming, at night, in front of at least 53,000, but not exceeding, 58,000 fans.  Nevada 41, BYU 13.

On a brighter note, BYU has a remarkably decent record in games I pick them to lose.  However, I think this team is mentally worse than a typical BYU team, which I normally think of as not being very mentally tough.  This team has the mental fortitude of a spoiled 12-year old girl.  The defense doesn't have that same confidence and consistent ability to come up big when it's needed.  Actually, remove consistent: they don't have the ability to EVER come up big.  The offense has a couple of guys that can go out and make a play, but Anae never seems to dial up the right plays at the right time for those guys.  Mentally, the guys just don't have toughness.  A team that can win in Austin as badly as they did, shouldn't need to eke out wins over Houston and Virginia, nor have losses to Utah State and UCF.  I know Taysom got hurt, but what were the other 21 offensive players on the two-deep doing in the offseason?  What were the coaches preparing for in the offseason?  Maybe they should worry less about having a special season and worry more about each game and each week.  No more lip service about one game at a time.  The Cougs need to actually take it one game at a time next season.  Facing 2 senior QBs the next two games, I could see the season turning really ugly for the Cougs, and in a hurry too.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

BYU at UCF: Mo's Prediction

BYU needs a fast start.  They cannot afford to get behind.  They need to run the football, play like a bunch of wild men on defense (and hopefully force turnovers, penalties, and sacks), and play field position.  It would be a big ask for Anae to make Christian Stewart win the game in his very first start.  Not that it's not possible, but UCF needs to be the one forcing him to win, not Anae.

That's what it takes.  BYU starts slow: they lose.  They need to believe they can win.  They need "wins" early in the game.  They need confidence again.  They should run the ball 9 of the first 10 plays (and the other one should be a play-action pass).  I don't care if that yields 3 punts.  BYU has to establish the running game, or at least that they are going to run the ball.  Lean on that defense, force them to play physical for 4 quarters.

I expect BYU comes out emotional.  That's fine: if they build a lead with that emotion.  I think the boys have been through a lot and it'll be tough to play a 4 quarter game tonight.  My model, even without Taysom, has BYU as 11-point favorites.

I am not so optimistic.  A 27-10 score wouldn't surprise me, and I could see either team being on the positive side of that score, but I'll go with UCF getting the 27, BYU 10.

BYU could still turn around and respond and win 9/10 games, but this is a tough game after a tough weekend.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Mo's Three Tips for BYU Football: 10/7/2014

As a follower of BYU football, I am encouraged to hear the words coming out of the player's mouths this week.  They are saying the right things.  If they, as they say they are, truly a team that is rallying around Taysom's injury, getting behind Christian Stewart, and prepared to play defense with passion, then great.  But they were also saying the right things ahead of the Utah State game.  I have a few major concerns about the BYU football team for games 6-12.

1. Pound the Football
Jamaal Williams is a great running back.  He's averaging nearly 20 carries and nearly 100 yards/game.  He has amazing burst (but not necessarily great top-line speed), agility, and surprising power and ability to finish runs.  Taysom had very similar numbers, though his running was a combination of power, speed (but not necessarily burst), and pure instinct.  Lost in all of that is Adam Hine and Algie Brown.  First off, two stats boggle the mind: 1) Paul Lasike has more carries than either of those guys and 2) Taysom/Jamaal each averaged more carries PER GAME than those guys have on the season.

This offensive line is built to run block; they aren't one of the top 10 rushing O-lines in the country but it's as good as BYU has had in some time.  Against Texas, BYU was going to run the ball.  They went right at Texas and just wore them down.  One of the biggest front 7s in the country got worn down by the BYU rushing attack.  BYU committed to running the football right at Texas, with attitude, with fire, and with absolute confidence.  There was a game plan in place and they stuck to it.  Texas slowed BYU up in the first half but BYU just overwhelmed them in the second (running pretty much the exact same plays).  More so than an explosive Baylor offense did last weekend.  But in the last 10 quarters, BYU had no obvious offensive strength outside of Taysom and Jamaal making something out of nothing.  There has been no clear design on taking it to their opponents.

From the very start against Utah State, even before the injury to Taysom, BYU was all over the place on offense.  Despite a large size advantage, BYU rarely tested the Aggies up the middle.  They threw long passes and put the ball in Taysom's hands on the outside.  Anae outsmarted himself.  Algie Brown had one carry later in the game.  Adam Hine had two total touches, and only one stemmed from the offensive playcalling.  Jamaal and Taysom were clearly the best ball-carriers on the team, but they didn't need to carry all the load they did.  Without Taysom now, can Anae re-engage more of a committee-style running game?  It was as if, for a few games, he became enamored with Taysom for Heisman and Williams breaking Harvey Unga's all-time rushing record and forgot he had other guys (Algie did miss two games b/c of injury).  Jamaal is now the leader of the offense, yes, but for him to make the plays necessary late in games, he's going to need more help from the rest of the backfield early in the games.  If Hine and Brown don't get 10 carries, Anae isn't doing a good job.

2. Balance on DEFENSE
The BYU defense has prided itself on its ability to stop the run.  Virginia had their way in the running game, going for 200 yards on 4.4 yards/carry.  However, every other opponent has averaged 3.0 yards/carry or less.  The DL has become so focused on, and so good at, eating up blockers in the run game that it appears they have spent zero time practicing, and zero effort in-game pursuing, their pass rush.  Yes, there is technique that can help with a pass rush, but so much of a good pass rush, ESPECIALLY IN THE COLLEGE GAME, is just pure passion and aggression.  Just once I would like to see a BYU DL push an OL backward, even if the DL gets his butt kicked and put on his back during the play: do something to change the status quo.  Yes, BYU has done a pretty good job keeping opposing QBs in the pocket, but part of that is because they are so comfortable in their LARGE pocket that they don't need to move out of it.

BYU continues to blitz with their MLBs who continue to get no pressure.  They aren't big enough to power rush the OGs they run up against.  The DL aren't big enough threats to demand constant double teams so the interior can keep their eyes open for blitzing/crossing LBs.  On one particular play against Utah State, BYU brought 6 guys and they got blocked by 5 guys: it should require 6 guys to block 5, even if your pass rush is average/mediocre.  This isn't a knock on Nick Howell, but I'm guessing a veteran defensive coach like Bronco would have found a way to manufacture pressure against the Aggies.

BYU has gotten success bringing Safeties and Harvey Jackson playing Nickelback.  Against spread offenses (like Houston, Utah State, Nevada, UNLV, and Cal) those blitzes from the secondary are more difficult to disguise.  If you can't disguise it, those guys get picked up by RBs or, even worse for your pass rush, OTs.  BYU's bread and butter blitz the past few seasons has been the OLBs.  Even if the Cougars don't disguise it, those guys are big enough to deal with some opposing OL and fast/athletic enough to deal with the others.  KVN and Ziggy Ansah used to blitz nearly every play, and opposing teams knew it, and they still got sack after sack after sack, hit after hit after hit.

BYU has to be willing to give up some of their run D to get into the head of opposing QBs!  Utah State was doing double moves all night b/c they never had to worry that they wouldn't have time for the play to develop!  They were probably on the sidelines drawing up plays in the dirt, or in the huddle on the palms of their hands.  That is why 2 straight back-up QBs have had career days against BYU: they had all day to throw.  Sell out on either the number of pass rushers or on the style of the DL's rush.  At least once per possession send everybody like a bat out of hell.

3. Attitude
I have mentioned to several folks how the one thing missing right now from most of BYU's players is attitude.  A Bronco-coached defense was always resilient in the face of adversity.  No one ever scored a TD the next play after a turnover.  No one ever threw a Hail Mary or an 80-yard bomb just before halftime.  No one ever went an entire half (or game) without a three and out.  BYU has showed some defensive grit in the 2nd half of the past three games, but a little more of that in the first half of those games would have gone a long way to producing a different final result.

Offensively, I don't see anyone getting over-aggression penalties.  On defense, that is welcomed and almost encouraged.  Nobody seems to have that edge, that desire to just blow someone up.  There is no drive to open up a hole that a semi-truck could go through.  It's been a few games since I've seen a hole that I could run through (or really that anyone besides Jamaal or Taysom could get through).  Taysom, Jamaal, and Jordan Leslie are the only perimeter guys I have seen selling out on every play (Terenn Houk perhaps in his more limited time).  Someone's going to have to take a stand this week against UCF.  This will be the best defense BYU sees all season long.  They are going up against it just two practices after Taysom's injury.  Is there someone capable of putting it all on the line for the team and stepping up/filling the void left by Taysom?  Lasike?  Matthews?  Mahina?

And the OL, where is the blocking we saw against UConn and Texas?  Run-blocking is about technique and passion: I only see technique right now.  For having such a deep OL, I don't see the bench being used as an in-game motivator for those just doing their jobs.  You want to keep your job: pancake someone!  Go watch how BYU attacked Texas.  Go see what Anae's old O at Zona did to Oregon in Eugene last week.  That is what BYU's O needs to look like, especially without Taysom.

BYU has not been the same team the past few games, and it's all about a lack of attitude.  They started the year with a chip on their shoulder.  Lately they've been playing like they had a clear, easy path to 12-0, like they were Alabama playing in the Mountain West Conference.  Bronco says they're playing hard and the coaches are coaching hard.  I don't think solid effort and conservative style are the same as playing/coaching hard.  You can play aggressively and still be assignment-sound.  Utah State brought passion to Provo and it made up for a lack of physical tools: they were playing hard.  BYU needs to flip that script.  And BYU needs to have fun doing it again!

If BYU wants to take a step forward against UCF this week: pound the rock, find balance on D, and just go absolutely crazy between the whistles.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Utah State at BYU: Mo's Reaction

BYU did it again.  They got everyone believing.  They even got the national media asking the "what if" question and can Taysom get to New York.  Then they ripped the hearts of the fans out.  At least they got it all in during one night.  It wasn't a prolonged demise.

On a night honoring Jim McMahon, they needed a less spectacular comeback than he led in the 1980 Miracle Bowl.  They never even came close.  The ball LITERALLY didn't bounce their way tonight.  Multiple times.  But, besides that, the front 7 made no plays on D.  Yes, the game is different if Taysom doesn't get hurt.  If he leads a game-tying TD drive before halftime, it's 21-21 at HT.  I have Taysom Hill as my QB, I feel good about BYU turning it around.  Or at least him putting up points until the D figures it out...if they ever figure it out.

As it was, a backup QB went 14/17 for 257 yards and 3 TDs against BYU's D.  And that was just the first half.  The O didn't help, never really establishing the running game.  The best defense for BYU tonight would have been an offense that was committed to running the football.  As with Virginia, they looked shell-shocked.  I'm not sure they were prepared to stop a power-running game led by a LB, but if you aren't prepared for a slow RB running into the strength of your defense, what are you prepared for?  Not getting a pass rush.  Not covering WRs.  I think the only think they were prepared to do was try to get the crowd amped up by waving their arms pre-snap.  And then letting the fans down time and time again.

They flirted with disaster twice before this season and Taysom put the team on his back.  Tonight, no one was able to pick up that mantle.  But, then again, they didn't give anyone a chance with a helter-skelter offense the 2nd half trying to get 30+ yards every pass play followed by a dive up the middle.

So, BYU managed to trick their fans again.  Fool me once, shame on you, fool me 7 times in the past decade, shame on me.  I'm not sure BYU can satisfy their fans again this season.  I'm not sure even 11-1 will restore the passion.  I've long feared that BYU is on the verge of losing their fan base.  Then they were poised for a "special" season until tonight.  Tonight was the first game they managed to break 60,000 fans this season.  They may not break 55k the rest of the season...

There's a lot to analyze with this game, especially as it relates to what we've seen the rest of the season, but, what's the point?

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Utah State at BYU 10/3/2014: Mo's Prediction

It's been a fun few weeks to be a BYU fan.  Taysom and BYU have been talked about more by the national college football guys than I can ever remember.  Heisman trophy?  Can BYU make playoff?  Is BYU the best non-P5 team?  Jim Rome.  Twice.  Doug Gottlieb.  Dan Patrick.  PTI.  I think there was even a Scott Van Pelt Show appearance in there too.

Bronco summed it up perfectly this week when (twice) he said: it only lasts as long as the 0 in the L column.  Taysom leaves the Heisman discussion with a loss (well, unless it was a 56-49 loss where he throws for 350 yards, rushes for 150, and has 6 TDs).  Maybe people talk about BYU in a New Year's 6 Bowl Game at 11-1 but it's not as hot a topic, since all discussion is focused on the playoff anyway.

The "big news" for this week's game is that Chuckie Keeton will not play for Utah State.  Bronson Kaufusi and Marques Johnson will suit up for BYU's D.  Algie Brown, De'Ondre Wesley, and Nick Kurtz will do the same for the BYU O.  I think it's great that BYU will be back at full strength.  We can see what the team is truly capable of doing.  Jordan Leslie has been better than Cody Hoffman was as a Junior.  If BYU can get another guy going like that at WR, that'd be phenomenal.  Jamaal Williams has carried the rushing load the past two games (though I don't get why Hine hasn't had more carries the past two games).  Add Algie's physicality and athleticism to that mix and that's a great complement.

Kaufusi and Johnson add two big bodies to help create a pass rush.  Kaufusi's athleticism and Johnson's size can either create opportunities for others b/c opposing O's commit bodies to stop those two or, if not, those guys can make plays on their own.  Without Chuckie in the game, the D doesn't have to worry as much about keeping Darell Garretson contained: he's not a running threat.  At all.  He has one favorite target in the passing game: Hunter Sharp.  Cover him, rush the passer, and Utah State's O might be in some trouble.  If Chuckie had been available to play, I don't think it would have made much difference: Utah State's O would still have been hard-pressed to do much in Provo.

Utah State managed 14 points in Logan last season against a good BYU defense.  They scored 3 in Provo 2 years ago against a really good BYU defense, though they should have been able to put up more against a 3-star recruit freshman QB (in only his 2nd career start) on the opposite side.  They managed 24 points in 2011, but still lost.  Now they face what I believe to be a great BYU defense (I believe Virginia was an aberration where the team wasn't mentally ready: that won't happen again this season, or at least shouldn't happen again!).

What BYU's D has been successful in doing to Utah State is forcing them to be one-dimensional.  In 2011, BYU took away the pass and Turbin couldn't do enough by himself.  In 2012, BYU took away everything.  In 2013, BYU took away the run and forced Garretson to throw (after Keeton went down).  If BYU can take away one dimension in Provo this year, I'm not sure Utah State is good enough right now to produce anything in the other dimension.  This just isn't as talented a team as we've seen from Utah State the last 5 seasons.

I think the OL for BYU is going to come out wanting to punish some people.  I think they see this game as a challenge: Utah State is one of the best rushing defenses in the country, statistically speaking.  I think BYU has TWO 100-yard rushers.  Taysom, Jamaal, Hine, or Brown.  There might be too many backs to get 2 guys over 100, so how about 300 yards rushing?  I think BYU will take a couple of shots deep in the passing game.  If a couple of those hit, Taysom throws for 200+ as well.  If not, they'll ride the OL and the combination of RBs and Taysom.  I don't think the question is victory or not, it's by how many touchdowns.  I'm going with 5: BYU 45, Utah State 10.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Virginia at BYU: Mo's Reaction

I'd like to start by apologizing: I jumped on the bandwagon and my influence over the sports universe was on full display Saturday afternoon as BYU struggled mightily against Virginia.  The offense wasn't as sharp as it had been the first 10 quarters of the season.  The defense looked as bad as it has in about 4 years, probably one of the 5 worst defensive games BYU has had in the Bronco Mendenhall era.  First, the offense.

A lot of BYU fans have been jumping on Taysom for his accuracy issues.  Yes, he did not have 100% accuracy against Virginia, or in the first half against Houston.  There is one weakness Taysom has always had and it has nothing to do with his arm: fear of overthrowing the ball.  For three years now, we have watched Taysom underthrow deep outs and sideline or comeback routes.  It's not that he doesn't have the arm to hit guys 15 yards down the field on the sideline.  Watch him throw in pre-game, or in drills, or watch him chuck the ball 40 or 50 yards up the field: he can get it done with his arm.  But during the games, on those routes, he wants to make sure only his guy can get it, and the throw ends up being one where not even his guy can get it.  Yes, this is a problem.  Or Anae can change up the playbook or play-calling to adjust.  I'd rather take the 2 addition completions a game than get 1 completion and 1 interception.

But let's step back for a minute and look at Taysom as a whole: he is completing 66% of his passes on the season.  There are only 23 QBs with higher percentages than Taysom.  Looking at those 23 players there are three things that stand out to me that apply to most of them: easier schedules so far, lots of screen passes (or other short/safe passes), and phenomenal WRs.  3 of BYU's 4 opponents are in the top 50 in multiple pass defense metrics (and the one that isn't is Virginia).  BYU has thrown maybe 5 or 6 screens this season and only 25% of his completions are to RBs: those numbers would be much higher for a large majority of the 23 players with higher percentages.  None of BYU's WRs are getting drafted: Alabama may have 3, including a top 10 pick.  BYU hasn't played nobodies like most teams to this point and Taysom has to earn his completions by throwing more difficult routes to less-talented receivers.  Yes, he made some bad throws the past two games and missed a couple of open receivers, but every QB does that multiple times every game. He isn't going to complete 80% of his throws.  Turn it down a notch.  He didn't turn the ball over and he threw two TDs while leading the O to score 34 points against a team that gave up less than 30 points to 2 teams expected/projected to be better than BYU this season.

Now, on to the defense.  There are legitimate complaints about what the D did this week.  BYU went from an aggressive attacking defense the first three games to a bend-a-heck-of-a-lot-but-don't-quite break D against Virginia.  In the first half, BYU could not stop the run very effectively.  In any passing situation, it seemed UVa's QB, or back up QB, could literally just throw it up and get a completion or a pass interference.

In retrospect, what we saw was a defense that was completely shell-shocked in the 1st quarter and totally exhausted in the 4th quarter.  BYU gave up 19 points to UVa last season and even that was somewhat of a fluke.  So when UVa ran the opening kickoff back to midfield and scored in 3 plays, I think they were surprised: they had expected to win by just showing up.  They slowed Virginia down on the next drive before UVa converted a bunch of third downs in their last drive of the 1st Q.  In the 2nd quarter, though, the front seven looked much stronger on 1st and 2nd down.  The back 4 looked awful on 3rd down though.  In the 3rd Q, BYU's defense again held their opponent scoreless (3 out of 4 games this season, with Texas the exception who scored a meaningless TD in the 3rd Q), but BYU's O wasn't on the field very long while putting up 14 points (less than 5 minutes time of possession in 3rd Q while outscoring the opponent 14-0).  By the 4th, they were just out of gas and had no choice but to just keep everything in front of them and force long drives.  Then Adam Hine had the nerve to return a kickoff for a TD after the D had just given up a 12-play drive that lasted over 5 minutes, where BYU held them to a FG.  It was bound to happen.

Now, it can't be explained away in those two phrases: shell-shocked and tired.  They could only get pressure when they brought 5 or 6 guys at any point in the game, and even then, that wasn't a guaranteed QB hurry/hit.  Even though they played good coverage in the secondary, for the most part, they couldn't prevent completions.  In the first half, it felt like everyone passively played their assignments in run defense, which led to a lot of 4-6 yard carries.  In the second half, guys attacked their assignments and actually filled the holes instead of standing in them, and it led to a lot more 0-2 yard gains.  The D gave up just 2 scoring drives in the 2nd/3rd quarter combined and both were FGs.  So it wasn't all bad.

Consider what BYU has shown this season: the ability to mold its defense and still have success/win games.  LSU is an attacking, in your face kind of a defense that is usually one of the best in the country.  But they got beat down at home this weekend by a previously unranked opponent because they didn't have the ability to change their defense enough, or in time, to give their O a chance to win.  BYU's D figured it out and slowed Virginia down enough to let Taysom take over in the 3rd Q and for BYU to emerge victorious.

With that said, I do not want to see another game like the Virginia game this season.  It felt like BYU lost b/c they had been so dominated.  Statistically, in a lot of ways, it was the worst game in the Bronco era.  I was physically and mentally exhausted by game's end; I can't imagine how the players must have felt!  But in spite of that, the Cougars did enough to win.  At the end of the day, the W matters.  The way I see it, I don't anticipate another game like this.  BYU has 2 types of opponents the rest of the season: ones that BYU will take too seriously for a repeat performance and ones that don't have the ability to repeat this performance against BYU's D.  The sky isn't falling.  BYU is still 4-0 and has the week off to refocus.  It seems like the perfect time for everyone to step back, get healthy, and correct some issues.

Friday, September 19, 2014

Virginia at BYU 9/20/2014: Mo's Prediction

I spent last weekend watching a lot of college football, as is usual for a Saturday.  This week was a little different than usual though.  I closely watched the speed and physicality of front 7's on defense.  I observed RBs' and WRs' cuts, catches, and miscues.  I paid close attention to the offensive lines; how they pass-protected and how they fired off in run-blocking.  I looked at coverage in secondaries and how DBs played (or didn't play) the ball in the air.  I scrutinized the QBs in terms of arm strength, decision-making, and mobility.  I tried to note everything that was happening in as many games as I could.  I usually casually make these same observations but  was scrutinizing it extremely close this past weekend b/c there's something I've been dying to know since last Wednesday or so: is BYU really that good?  I'm always afraid to buy into BYU b/c the moment I do, they let me down.  So before I put my blue goggles back on after years of collecting dust, I want to be sure.

Three weeks into the season and after more intense scrutiny last week, I have come to the conclusion that, yes, BYU is legitimately that good.  There are a few QBs that throw better than Taysom, there are a few QBs that run better than Taysom, but there are not many QBs that are better than Taysom.  The only three I'd even consider taking over Taysom Hill at this point would be: Marcus Mariota, Everett Golson, and (maybe) Kenny Hill (though I believe he is made better by Sumlin's system: if Case Keenum was a "system QB" for Kevin Sumlin, why can't Kenny Hill be?).  There isn't a QB in the Big Ten or ACC I'd rather have.  Not even close (you could obviously argue Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston but I'll take the quiet confidence of Taysom over the brash arrogance, and stupidity, of Winston).  In the Big 12, I'm high on Trevor Knight but would feel more comfortable with Taysom if I needed to win the game late in the 4th.  In the Pac 12, it's Mariota or bust there.  SEC: Kenny Hill is the ONLY contender that I've seen.  Taysom is that good.  Yes, he was a little inaccurate in the first half against Houston.  Yes, he got a little run-crazy in the second half against Houston.  But he was making plays, just as he did against Texas and UConn.  After watching #5 Auburn and #20 Kansas State on Thursday night, BYU has a much better QB than either of them!

The passion and violence that BYU's D plays with is unmatched outside of the SEC and I've only seen two or three defenses in the SEC that are as "crazy" as BYU's D.  There are teams with more speed, more size, and the ability to be more physical.  But I still love BYU's front 7. What they have done to two reasonably good offenses is impressive: held Texas and Houston to less than 100 rushing yards.  Combined.  The secondary covers well and hits hard.  As is always the case with BYU, they could play the ball better in the air, but at least they are close enough to WRs to have a chance to play the ball, and THAT has not always been the case!

Jamaal Williams, Adam Hine, Paul Lasike, and Algie Brown are all good RBs in their own right.  All are very physical.  Jamaal adds shiftiness to the physicality.  Hine has blazing speed.  Lasike adds a double layer of physicality.  Algie seems to be the most viable pass-catcher out of the backfield.  The combination of the 4 makes BYU tough to defend (assuming they use all 4 which was NOT the case against Houston, which was unfortunate).  They run behind as tenacious an offensive line as I have seen at BYU.  What BYU is doing with mostly underclassmen on the OL is impressive.  They are blocking with extreme prejudice.  Outside of Jordan Leslie, the WRs have been average but Jordan Leslie is a baller.  He run blocks with the same intensity as he carries when tracking balls through the air.  He was a great addition to BYU.  We'd be lost without him in the passing game.  Credit Matthews as well: when guys blow coverage on him he takes advantage, I just haven't seen him get separation without someone on D messing up...

Take one of the best QBs in the nation, add in one of the most relentless defenses, a phenomenal group of RBs, a physical and deep OL, and a coaching staff that is really coming into their own right now, and you have one of the 10 best teams in America.  There, I said it, I'm buying in.  BYU isn't perfect, but they are great.  If you live in Utah and don't have plans to attend the game against Virginia, or any BYU game this season, shame on you.  This has the makings of the best BYU season in nearly 20 years and one of the best BYU teams of all-time.

Am I worried about Virginia?  Absolutely not.  The only team left on BYU's schedule that can beat BYU is BYU.  Heading into the Houston game I was concerned that turnovers might be able to swing the outcome of the game.  Had BYU's D not stepped up the way it did in the 3rd quarter, it might have.  Heading into Virginia, who has done a great job with takeaways, I do not feel the same angst.  Quite simply, we are a much better team than they are.  It would take a cataclysmic series of events for Virginia to emerge victorious on Saturday.

Taysom Hill and the offense is miles ahead of last year's team that still nearly did enough to win on a soggy field in ACC Territory.  BYU is 22nd in rushing offense, Taysom is 20th in completion %, and the offense is averaging over 5 TDs/game.  All that happened with 2 games on the road (one against one of the great defensive head coaches in the country) and the lone home game coming on a 5-day turnaround.  Yes, I would rather see BYU put a clean sheet in the turnover column, but one or two turnovers won't make this game close.  It will take 3/4.  Virginia may end up being the 3rd best D BYU faces this season, but this isn't an elite D.  And I just spent the first half of this post calling BYU an elite O (well, I never said elite b/c I don't like our WRs, but elite QB and upper-echelon OL/RBs).

The D also appears to be playing at a clip similar to some of the best BYU defenses in Bronco's coaching history (2006, 2007, and 2012).  Virginia is in the 90's in both rushing and passing offense, in the 100's in total offense, and 73rd in scoring offense (which is only so high b/c they forced 7 turnovers against FCS opponent Richmond).  I don't see where they will amass 300 yards of offense.  I'm not sure they reach 250.  BYU can stack the box without fear of being burned deep.  They should be able to do to Virginia what they did to Texas: completely stifle them.

As a fan, I can have this opinion.  I hope the players are preparing as if they don't believe the things I just wrote.  Something tells me that with last year's loss on their minds, the close game last week against Houston, and the extra 2 days between games they will come out fired up and ready to win.  If my assessment of what I've seen in the college football world the past 3 weeks is correct, Virginia does not belong on the same field as BYU.  Certainly not at home.

BYU 41, Virginia 13

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Houston at BYU: Mo's Prediction

BYU should win this game easily, by 3 TD's +.  However, every time I start believing in BYU, they lose the very next game.  So I am making a conscious effort to not buy-in 100% until next week, when I can have full confidence that BYU will emerge victorious.  Compounding that issue is the fact that BYU has the nation's attention right now, the home environment should be absolutely electric, and it is a big-time game.  People around the country have become enamored with Taysom Hill this past week, this is the only college game on tonight, on ESPN in prime time, so people who wouldn't normally watch BYU may tune in.  Utah County residents, and other casual BYU fans, who may not normally attend a game may make an effort to head to LaVell Edwards Stadium.  It's the perfect opportunity for BYU to make a statement, or to lay an egg.

Here are the more realistic reasons why I worry about BYU tonight: Houston has speed all over the field, Houston forces a lot of turnovers, Houston can score quickly (off of turnovers especially), and Houston has a high octane, quick passing game where BYU's large cushions and bend but don't break philosophy could hurt them.  After watching a lot of the Houston game again from last year, Taysom had a great and awful game all at the same time.  Houston really got after him.  Because they constantly sent so much pressure after him, he was able to get the ball up the field through the air and had a career day.  He also threw three interceptions and got hit a lot.

If BYU gets off to a slow start, turns the ball over, or doesn't stay aggressive on special teams, Houston could go up 14-0 in a heart beat.  That would be the perfect way to lose the East Coast audience.  BYU will then fight back make it close until just before half when they give up 10 quick points and lose the Midwest.  The BYU I grew up with would certainly play like this in this situation.  Is this the same BYU team I grew up watching and loving (and always getting frustrated with)?  We'll find out tonight.

And now the prediction: but I think BYU is different.  I think BYU has more size, speed, athleticism, and depth, and they have a QB whose drive to win is only exceeded by his ability to deliver wins.  Forget about what I said about not buying in.  This is the best team BYU has had since 2006, maybe 1996.  BYU takes care of the ball early, forces a turnover or two in the first quarter, and plays sound on their coverage teams: BYU 42, Houston 17.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Mo Knows Model Update: 9/9/2014

I accidentally blew my model up over the weekend and had to put in a few hours, late at night while watching Colorado State vs. Boise State, to fix it.  When I following got it to produce outputs, I wasn't pleased with the outputs: I want the outputs to quantify my gut and this didn't quite hit it right.  It had BYU in the top 10 and Ohio State a few spots ahead of Virginia Tech, just outside the top 25.  I still think that's probably too high for BYU, although that might be a reasonable ceiling given that BYU has a good chance at 11 wins, which would probably allow them finish in the top 10, depending on when that loss is, to whom, and by how much.

Here is the current top 25:
1 Auburn
2 Oklahoma
3 Florida State
4 Oregon
5 USC
6 UCLA
7 BYU
8 Alabama
9 Georgia
10 Ole Miss
11 Texas A&M
12 LSU
13 Arizona St
14 Notre Dame
15 Stanford
16 Louisville
17 Washington
18 UTSA
19 South Carolina
20 Missouri
21 Mississippi St
22 NIU
23 Baylor
24 Michigan St
25 Marshall

It's not perfect.  Obviously.  I would take Washington, UTSA, and Marshall out if I could and add Wisconsin, Virginia Tech, and probably Iowa.  I would move BYU down probably around 15 or so.  But it's an objective model so I don't want to tweak it.  I like Louisville and Mississippi State where they are, which is higher than they currently sit in the polls.  I think those two have solid teams not to be overlooked this season.  Baylor and Kansas State are two of the more overrated teams, according to my model.

The model has accurately predicted the winners in 84% of games thus far, which is a little low for this point of the season, given that there are really very few 50-50 matchups being played in the first two weeks of the season.  It has gone exactly 50% against the spread, which is lower than last season, when it hit at a 58% clip against the Vegas Wednesday night spread.  I started comparing my model to the spread on Tuesday this year, which may explain some of the difference...

In Week 1 it accurately predicted a few upsets: UTSA over Houston and Ohio over Kent State (hit the point spread exactly).  Of the 8 upsets in Week 1, it whiffed on 3 completely, predicting a bigger margin of victory than the point spread, hit 2 right on, and had 3 where it called for the underdog to cover.  If you knew which 8 games to pick, it would have been a beautiful weekend!

In Week 2, there were 7 upsets and it accurately predicted 3 of them.  In Week 3, it calls for 5 upsets: UTSA over OK State (as I've stated before, my model loves UTSA for some reason, so take that one with a grain of salt), Rutgers over Penn State, South Carolina over Georgia (has that as a Pick, basically, with a 0.3-point edge to the home team), Tulsa over FAU, and Georgia State over Air Force.  Overall, it likes the frontrunners this week: in 51 FBS vs. FBS games, it likes the favorite 36 times and the underdog only 15, 5 of which it likes the underdog straight up.

After the recalibration including week 2 results, BYU moved up to #7.  Looking ahead, it likes BYU in every game the rest of the season by at least 2 scores.  The Cal game is the only game where the point spread has gotten closer since the preseason predictions; in the rest of the games the point spread has only widened as BYU started 2-0 (unexpectedly according to the model) and most of their opponents have slid down in the rankings.

The biggest movers and shakers in the rankings since the preseason are:
Arizona: up 15 spots
California: up 21 spots
Fresno State: down 16 spots
Iowa State: down 26 spots
Michigan State: down 13 spots
NC State: up 14 spots
New Mexico State: up 15 spots
Northwestern: down 16 spots
Penn State: up 17 spots
Rice: down 13 spots
Rutgers: up 15 spots
South Carolina: down 13 spots
Temple: up 16 spots
Tennessee: up 23 spots
Texas: down 19 spots
Tulane: down 20 spots
UCF: down 21 spots
Louisiana-Lafayette: down 14 spots
Louisiana-Monroe: up 14 spots
Utah State: down 13 spots
Vanderbilt: down 20 spots
Washington State: down 19 spots
Western Kentucky: up 15 spots

As you can see, BYU plays 4 of the biggest movers, but only 1 of them is headed the right direction when it comes to strength of schedule.  In the final analysis, I'd rather see BYU 12-0 with a lower SOS than 11-1 with a stronger SOS.  Cal, Middle Tennessee, and Nevada are the only 3 to have moved up the rankings; the other 8 have dropped.

I'm curious to see how BYU responds this Thursday.  BYU usually waits until the fans start to believe before crushing their hearts.  I think they got enough people on the bandwagon with last weekend's thorough trouncing of Texas that the Houston game would qualify.  The model predicts a 20-point win, Vegas says 18.5...does Mo know something Vegas doesn't?  Based on my performance so far, it's a 50-50 proposition going with my model!

Monday, September 8, 2014

BYU at Texas Post Game Reaction

Two main takeaways for me from BYU's dominating 3rd Quarter against Texas: 1) This defense is legit and 2) this offense can go for the jugular in a big way.  There have been very few BYU offenses in the last 20 years that could have finished drives the way BYU did tonight, against what is supposed to be a stout defense.

I understand Texas was starting a new QB and breaking in a mostly new offensive line.  But David Ash sat out all spring and Tyrone Swoops got all the reps in spring and a lot of them in fall camp.  He was being prepared to be the starter during the offseason.  In terms of the offensive line, 4 of the guys starting were similarly being prepped for significant contributions during the offseason.  It's not as if they lost 6 offensive starters in the first week of the season.  What happened was BYU just absolutely took it to them.  The Texas offense wanted nothing to do with BYU for 1/2 the game.  Without Bronson Kaufusi for a period of the game, Texas was held to less than 260 yards and only 7 (meaningless) points.  They allowed some yards in the passing game, by design.  But they absolutely stuffed the running game.  The past few seasons, so many of the big plays on defense have come from a small handful of players.  The defense has had big plays this season from a lot of different guys.  Sacks, TFLs, fumbles (recovered and forced), and INTs have come from 14 different players.  In 2 games!  And 4 starters have yet to get on the board.  That's a lot of guys that can make plays.

Offensively, BYU got contributions from some new sources tonight as well.  Texas did everything it could to prepare to stop BYU's rushing attack.  They did twice as well as the last time they played BYU in terms of yards, but BYU had 5 rushing touchdowns.  They ran up the gut, albeit with only small impacts for most of the game, they went outside, and Taysom scrambled on called pass plays.  They hit WRs on timing routes, hit backs out of the backfield, and even got enough mustard on throws while under duress to make acrobatic catches.  Yes, they left a few points on the board.  Yes, Taysom could have been better in the pocket, he could have gotten more guys involved, and he could have done a better job in the red zone.  There were opportunities to get throwing TDs down there and Taysom couldn't get the job done.  But still, BYU took advantage of their opportunities in the 3rd Q.  Jordan Leslie stepped up throughout the game, that's a good sign.  If he can get involved, BYU's passing game will be tough to stop too.

Other thoughts: the story around the country is about Texas getting embarrassed.  That's a shame.  It's always the story though: the G5 schools never have and never will get proper credit for beating P5 opponents.  BYU went into a P5 opponent's house, who has played in 2 national championship games in the last decade, and thoroughly trounced them exactly one year after doing the same thing to them.  The storyline should be BYU.  BYU should have moved higher than 25th in one poll.  Show me a team that has convincingly won two road games so far this season, one against one of the biggest power players in all of college sports.  That deserves at least #20 in my opinion.

Taysom Hill is a phenomenal player.  But let's not go crazy: he will not win the Heisman this year.  If he continues as he is going right now and BYU gets to 11 or 12 wins, he might get an invitation to New York.  He'll have a few chances to impress in Thursday and Friday night games, but wise up, BYU fans, this 0 TD, 1 INT performance (against a defense that may not be very good after all, though I think it'll turn out to be a pretty decent D) isn't going to get him the Heisman Trophy.

Finally, barring a miraculous set of circumstances, even at 12-0, BYU will not make the college football playoff.  Consider this competition: ACC Champ, Pac 12 Champ, SEC Champ, Big Ten Champ, Big 12 Champ, and the runner up from both the SEC and Pac 12. They have to pass up 4 of those teams to make the playoff (not even counting Notre Dame who has looked formidable and has several big games on the schedule).  That is two CONFERENCE champions and quite possibly 1-loss (and top-10 ranked all season) runners up in the 2 best conferences in America that BYU has to pass.  12-0 gets them into one of the "big" bowl games, but that may be the ceiling with this schedule and with BYU's conference affiliation.  With that said, winning every game on the schedule by 25+ points would go a long way to setting up those miraculous circumstances.

Friday, September 5, 2014

BYU at Texas: Mo's Prediction

Far and away, the biggest game of BYU's season is Texas.  Bronco and the players can say "one game at a time" or "the game in front of us is the biggest game" all they want.  BYU fans know better.  Without a win at Texas on September 6th, it almost doesn't matter what the Cougars do the rest of the season.  BYU fans will still tune in, root with all they have, and hang on Taysom's every run.  However, without a ranking, without an outside chance at one of the big bowl games, without wins against their toughest opponents in the toughest environments, without any ranked opponents on the schedule, BYU fans will be the only ones paying much attention to the Cougars after this week if BYU loses.

So, yes, BYU needs to win this game.  If they don't win this one, the others have significantly less meaning.  BYU needs to be nationally relevant in October and November.  This isn't about an audition for the Big 12 (if the Big 12 ever has to expand, BYU will be one the top 3 choices regardless of the outcome of this game), or even launching a potential Taysom Heisman run, it's about getting noticed and recognized by people other than your own fans (and those Utah fans who love nothing more to see BYU fail).  BYU needs to stay on people's radar throughout the season for their on-field performance and that won't happen if they lose to the only top-notch opponent on the schedule.

Texas is still Texas.  I don't expect them to compete for a national championship this year, but I expect them to be very competitive in one of the best conferences in America.  I heard one BYU fan try to play role reversal to determine what we might expect from Texas.  Imagine BYU had to play Wisconsin again this year, a team that controlled much of the game against BYU last season.  Now, kick a half-dozen BYU players from the two-deep off the team in the offseason.  Pretend Taysom Hill and our best offensive lineman got hurt against Connecticut.  Suspend another starter and back-up the week of the game.  How would BYU fans expect the Cougars to perform, even at home?  To that I say: if BYU were Texas I would still have high expectations.

Every single player on Texas' roster was recruited to play at one of the premier college football programs in the country.  They were vetted by some of the greatest college football minds and recruiters to come sport the Burnt Orange and play in front of 100k+ fans in Austin.  They might be inexperienced and playing in a new system, but once upon a time they were MVPs of championship-winning high school teams, teams that sent multiple players to play Division I football.  They were well-coached in high school and have been for 2-3 years in college.  So, no, I expect them to come out guns blazing and playing with a chip on their shoulder, and to have the physical abilities to match the intensity of their play.

Where this might hurt Texas is later in the game.  These young, former back-ups can't play 4 straight quarters, every play.  Their back-ups are now former scout team players, pressed into action because they need to be.  While these players may be athletic, physical, or fast, these are the guys BYU can take advantage of.  They are both young and inexperienced instead of just being inexperienced.  They are playing in their first meaningful football game (last week doesn't count).  They have been hearing from their friends, family, and community that they need to take BYU to the woodshed.  That can cause over-aggression, which isn't always a good thing in football.

In short, to me, the game means everything for BYU's season.  And, while it doesn't mean the same for Texas, I expect Texas to come out ready to play.

Honestly, like the oddsmakers, I have no clue what to expect from this game.  With a new QB, I suspect Texas will try to lean on the running game.  By all accounts, in spite of injuries throughout their careers, Texas has 3 quality RBs.  Will they be able to make plays behind a very inexperienced offensive line?  My heart says BYU will be able to stop the run, if not with the front 7, then by stacking the box with an 8th or maybe even 9th guy.  They will force a young QB to beat them with his head and arm.  But my gut says that Bronco will play bend but don't break defense, which will give the OL confidence, open some creases for the backs, and give Swoops some time to get settled in his first collegiate start.  My gut tells me that Texas will still break several back-breaking big plays to keep the crowd amped and put BYU on their heels.

Looking back at last year's game, Texas didn't lose this game because their offense wasn't performing well.  In fact, they put up more yards and points than any other team that played in Provo last season.  Only Houston and Notre Dame moved the ball better on BYU's D than Texas.  It was the defense that lost the game.  The offense may not be as dynamic, this is true, but the defense is significantly improved.  Add a raucous home crowd itching for revenge and this will be a test.  What if Taysom gets hurt?  What if Anae gets an early lead and goes into uber-conservative mode like he did last time in Austin? Or, worse yet, what if Taysom gets stopped and Anae doesn't know how to get things jump started?  Are we in for one of those 7-6 defensive slugfests/offensive slopfests?

My model gave Texas a TD win.  Even before the injuries and suspensions, I felt the model overrated Texas (of course, I also feel it overrates BYU, so I guess it balances).  Removing the players that were injured/suspended, Texas moves from 7.5-point favorite to 4.5-point underdog.  If the Cougar offense moves the ball half as well as they did in Provo last year, I suspect BYU will take control of the game and win easily, 4 points would be way too little.  If Texas steps their D up a huge notch and BYU struggles to move/score, Texas could blow BYU out of the water with big yardage plays, forced turnovers, and special teams.

Texas is ready for this game, regardless of who suits up and takes the field.  They have all been wanting a chance to prove that last season's game was an anomaly and it was not Texas football.  BYU had better be ready too.  If they come out flat, nervous, or just even-keeled, which they have been known to do in some of their bigger games, it may be over quickly.

Texas, on the backs of a few big plays, will find ways to score on BYU.  Emotions will be high for the Longhorns, guys will make plays, errors will be made by the D if BYU doesn't match the intensity, and Texas will make BYU pay for it with some big plays.  BYU, on the other hand, is the more mature team, they will match Texas' intensity (and long-yardage plays) with sustained drives and by keeping Texas guessing.

I'll trust my model and the Texas defense: Texas 27, BYU 21.  I'd love to be wrong.  I'd also love to say BYU 40, Texas 21, but only a crazy person would predict BYU to beat Texas by 19 on the way to setting every single-game rushing record by a Texas opponent...

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Tuesday Tidbit, Wednesday Waffle, Thursday Thought on 9/4/2014

For long-time followers of the blog, yes, all 4 of you, you'll recall on Tuesdays I usually put a stat out from BYU's previous game that I found telling in determining the outcome of the game, or just mildly interesting.  Wednesday, I would waffle about something that Bronco or BYU did or did not do.  Thursday, I would put out a thought about the upcoming game or weekend of games if BYU was on a bye that weekend.  I'm a bit late to the party this week, so I'm combining all three into one.

Tuesday Tidbit
Many BYU fans were a bit disappointed with BYU's offensive output in the second half.  It certainly was lacking, but the defense didn't do a great job getting off the field either.  With that said, they only had 1 three and out the entire game on offense, which is a vast improvement from some road games from last season.  In the first half, both sides did a much better job though.

In 7 first half drives, BYU's offense got at least 2 first downs in 6 drives.  The lone holdout was the 1-play, 35-yard TD drive, which was a successful drive without needing any first downs.  In four 2nd half drives (not counting the 5th drive that ended the game), BYU managed 2 first downs in only two, which isn't necessarily bad, except that they only had one drive yield any points.  I don't expect BYU to have near the same success ratio against Texas as the Cougars did against UConn, but they can't move the ball less than 20 yards in 50% of its possessions against the Longhorns for a half.  It does three things: one, it limits your opportunities to score; two, it limits your defense's opportunities to rest; and three, it kills you in the field position game, which often becomes a major factor in determining points and wins/losses, especially against higher level competition.  If BYU gets 12 possessions against Texas, it needs to move the sticks twice in at least 7 or 8 of the drives.  If BYU only manages to do it in 5 or 6, there better be points in nearly all of those drives.

Defensively, in Connecticut's 7 first half possessions, they managed two or more first downs in only 2.  In the second half, UConn had 5 possessions and managed it in 4.  UConn dominated time of possession and field position in the second half.  If they were any good, they would have dominated the scoreboard as well.  They had 4 drives inside BYU's red zone in the 2nd half, if they had scored one more touchdown, or kicked two field goals, especially in the 3rd quarter, the game might have gotten a little closer than BYU fans would want.  Certainly, I wouldn't expect 4 red zone drives in the 2nd half against Texas to yield only 3 points.  BYU can't have the same trends.  Perhaps with guys back from injury and suspension, BYU will be better rested in the 2nd half.

Wednesday Waffle
I don't pretend to know anything about anything when it comes to suspensions, team discipline, etc.  I have no inside source to the team.  I don't follow every rumor (or even believe most any of them) on Cougar Board or Cougar Fan.  But I do think it's a shame that Bronco held out Jordan Johnson for Connecticut.  If you want to suspend him for a game, great, do it for Texas.  Since Bronco isn't announcing reasons or details about discipline, no one would know the difference if Jordan had served a suspension one game later.

Jordan Johnson is from the northeast and he didn't seem to know he was going to be suspended from the game, based on comments during interviews last week.  He traveled all the way across the country as a non-LDS African American to play for BYU, at a time when BYU had no minority coaches.  He came back from a tough knee injury last season that cost him a full season of eligibility, where his play-making ability could have been the difference in a handful of tough losses.  I think you have to reward a kid fighting hard like that by letting him play in front of his family and friends.  Suspend him for two games, if you must, but I think Bronco made a mistake sitting him for UConn.

Again, I don't now the details surrounding the suspension, but it rubs me the wrong way.  Coach Rose goes out of his way to get guys who travel a long way from home to play for BYU a chance for a game back home.  I think that can help recruiting.  I think Bronco's way might cost him a recruit or two down the line: I won't subscribe to the Blue Goggle philosophy that if they don't absolutely want BYU, they don't deserve BYU.  These are 17 year old kids making these decisions, and for non-LDS kids especially, BYU is a very hard choice to make.  And now we add the fact that there are dollar signs added to the recruiting process.  Somewhere along the way, BYU has to recruit guys who can play, who didn't necessarily think about BYU at first.  JJ was just such a guy and we're lucky to have him.  Hold him accountable still, but there are better ways to punish a kid for making a mistake.

Thursday Thought
BYU fans often lament BYU's "struggles" against mobile quarterbacks.  I have two thoughts about this: first, everyone struggles, to some degree, with (good) mobile QBs and second, BYU hasn't actually struggled against them, particularly in the last 5 years.  Texas turns from a non-stationary passing QB to a much more mobile QB.  The formula to beat a mobile QB is fairly simple, some is coaching and some is not.  First, have very active, mobile, and smart LBs.  BYU has a lot of experience and smarts in their OLBs.  The ILBs are not as experienced, but certainly have the potential to be active.  Second, play a lot of zone coverage.  When was the last time BYU gave a team a steady diet of man coverage in the secondary?  Third, convince your DL to not go sack crazy and focus on collapsing the pocket and containing the QB.  BYU doesn't have any decent pass rushers on the DL anyway, so they'll be fine.

If Swoops is going to be truly a run-first QB, I have no doubt BYU can contain him.  If his cannon/arm turns out to be precise and accompanied with good decision-making abilities, I worry a lot more about BYU's chances.  I know mobile QBs can hurt you with more than just their rushing yards, they extend plays with their legs and can quickly pad passing stats in that way.  However, I think it's important to note that while BYU has played a lot of mobile QBs the past 4 seasons, the last time one managed even 50 rushing yards was October 1, 2010, in probably one of the top 3 embarrassing losses of the Bronco era.  Utah State's Diondre Borel rushed for 68 yards as Utah State demolished BYU 31-16, in a game that wasn't even that close.

Keep in mind, that is 50 yards, not 100.  For some perspective, Taysom Hill has started 16 games for BYU and has rushed for over 50 yards in 14 of the 16, and has gone over 100 yards in 7 of them.  He rushed for 72 yards in one QUARTER of play against Boise State 2 years ago (which doesn't even count in those 14/16 since he didn't start).  If Swoops can't throw, Texas better get the RBs involved, no mobile QB is going to beat BYU by himself.

One final word about this: BYU fans, shut up about BYU's struggles against mobile QBs.  Stop living in the distant past and get with the times.  Very few teams have enjoyed the success BYU has against mobile QBs the past 5 seasons.

Friday, August 29, 2014

BYU at UConn Postgame Reaction

I don't really have much to add to my pregame prediction: it was pretty spot on (for the first time ever).  BYU was very good at times.  UConn was bad most of the time.  I've heard one phrase this week that I have to laugh at: UConn is rebuilding.  Sorry, UConn is building: they've never been good.  Now, a couple of thoughts:

First, the OL did a pretty solid job, considering 2 freshmen started.  They weren't great opening holes in the middle in the running game, but Anae was able to work around that with the triple option look, getting guys outside/in space.  There were quite a few penalties on the group but I'll call a spade a spade: a lot of the refs calls tonight were questionable, on both sides.  For a line that was all over the place in spring and fall camp, I think they performed reasonably well against one of the bigger defensive fronts they will see this year.

Second, Zac Stout was fantastic.  He attacked in the middle.  He took on blockers, he made tackles, he was a disruptive force.  If he can stay healthy, he's going to have a great year.  I think the middle linebackers played well for most of the game.  They helped the front 7 pretty well control the line of scrimmage.  UConn tried to run the ball, and they had a little bit of success late in the 2nd Q and early in the 3rd, but couldn't maintain it.

Third, the first half, the pass rush didn't quite get there.  In the second half, Bronco brought a lot more pressure, particularly from the secondary, but also from the MLBs.  As a result, the "normal" pass rushers also managed to break through.  I think that's something BYU has to take a look at doing against Texas.  They can't afford to not get pressure for a whole half.

Fourth, I don't think there's a great WR on this team like Hoffman, but I like the group as a whole.  Guys weren't dropping passes.  They were getting open.  They were making plays, getting yards after the catch.  There isn't a go-to receiver, which may hurt in games against Texas, UCF, and Boise State, but there's also a benefit to having a couple of reliable guys.  9 guys made catches, no Ross Apo, no Devon Blackmon, no Trey Dye.  Those 3 should add something and provide some additional depth and play-making ability in the coming weeks and months.  Jordan Leslie is a great blocker, I'd like to see what he can do as a pass catcher.  TEs were non-existent: Devin Mahina had one catch.

Fifth, the secondary was very good.  They made plays on the ball, had big hits, tackled well in space, and covered well.  With two starters out, they did that.  Yes, UConn had 284 yards passing, but it took 48 passes to get there.  Additionally, when the game was on the line, they performed well.  BYU only gave up 95 passing yards in the first half when the outcome was still in question and they defended well in the red zone in the 4th quarter.

I think it's a team that's going to get better.  A lot of the first half penalties I don't blame BYU, the refs were ridiculous.  In the 2nd half, the penalties were all earned and stupid.  The running game will get better with Jamaal Williams back.  I don't think BYU really committed to running the football tonight in his absence like they otherwise would have.  It will be interesting to see how much they commit to it against a bigger, faster, stronger, better coached Texas front 7 next week.

I'm sure we'll see games where the passing attack does more, but Taysom was on, the OL protected well, the WRs caught balls.  I think BYU will get better, they will get challenged at Texas next week in a way they weren't tonight.  I applaud BYU for being willing to play on the road against a mediocre (but still a step above FCS) team.  I think we learned a heck of a lot more about BYU than if we had hosted Idaho State and blown them out in week one.

In other notes: UTSA demolished Houston tonight.  My model originally had them winning at Houston, but after some tweaks I made, it moved them to a 0.5-point underdog.  The model had them winning every other game on the schedule.  I said to pay attention to them this year, but now I say: really watch out for them!  They host Arizona next week and play at OK State the week after that.  It's an impressive early schedule and I thought they were an impressive team tonight.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

BYU at UConn: Prediction for 2014 Season Opener

BYU never likes to make it easy on themselves.  2 more players/starters have been suspended for tomorrow's season opener against UConn.  I'm going to say what I've been telling people for weeks: it's UConn.  If BYU is ANY good at all, the injuries and suspensions to a half dozen skill position starters should not matter one lick.  BYU should be able to absolutely maul UConn in the trenches.

Connecticut is big but untested on both lines.  BYU is big and quite experienced, a little less so on the defensive side of the ball.  In terms of the skill positions, the injured and suspended players gave BYU a distinct advantage on the outside as well as at the point of attack.  Now the advantage is gone, but shouldn't become a disadvantage.  From my perspective, the backups should be as good as UConn's starters.  BYU has out-recruited UConn for years.  The place where BYU might be in trouble is in terms of fatigue or injury which would force the (now) backups (former 3rd stringers) into action.  I don't think I like BYU's 3rd string against UConn's 1st string.  But I think the 2nd string should hold their own.

UConn is just not a good football team.  They have had two decent seasons in their entire football existence (and by decent I mean they went 8-5 in a watered-down Big Least).  And that was 2 coaches ago.  They will be better than last season's 3-9 team.  But if BYU fans believe their team has what it takes to win 9/10 games this season, this is a walk in the park.

What I sense from BYU fans is that they really aren't sold on the state of the program right now.  There are plenty of blue-goggled folks who want to bestow apostleship on Bronco.  I'm not talking about those folks.  I have said the entire off-season, BYU is one more mediocre season from losing the fan base.  A loss, or even a tight battle, against UConn would be the first step down that path.

Some BYU fans think the betting line is too big.  Here's how I see it: BYU's O should put up 27 points.  With Taysom Hill, an experienced OL, 2/3 decent RBs, and a wide variety of skillsets at WR/TE, 4 TDs (or 3 TDs and 2 FGs) should not be very hard against a team that gave up over 30 points/game last season, while only playing 3 teams with offenses as good as BYU's.  New season, new coach, new system, same players.  They had a lot of improvement to make; they probably made quite a bit.  But BYU should score 27 points at least.  There wasn't enough time to improve that much.

This was also an offense that struggled to do much last season.  They lost a lot on the offensive line.  They are playing the two-QB system game.  I have seen this work only once and I've seen it fail many times.  Many coaches fear making the wrong choice when it's close between 2 guys.  I say, if you choose to play 2 QBs, you guarantee that you made the wrong choice.  You cannot be right!  As such, UConn should not be able to drive the ball down the field consistently, even against a secondary down 2 starters.  13 points, maybe 17.  That's about as much as their O should score against a BYU D that figures to be down a bit this season, particularly against the run.

Special teams and turnovers can also play roles in scoring, but taking those out of the equation: BYU should score 27+, UConn should score 17 or less.  In season opening games, there is a very fine line between scoring 21 and 35: a penalty here, a dropped pass there.  But if the BYU offense is clicking, it doesn't take much time for 27 to become 38 or 41.  If the two QB system implodes for UConn (which it will eventually this season, just don't know if that's the first game or not), then even 17 becomes a tough number to hit.

My best estimate for Friday night at UConn: BYU 34, UConn 13.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

G5 Top 10

Now that the BCS is officially gone, the non-BCS schools get the moniker of G5 instead of non-BCS.  I guess I'll try to get used to this crazy new college football world we live in.  Normally, I would go through and pick my G5 top 10 on my own, but I put a lot of time and effort into the statistical quantification of my gut ("the model"), so I'll just go with my top 10 from the model, with one replacement, and some reshuffling.  The prediction for each of the teams is for 10+ wins this season.  One of the conference champions will get a chance in a major bowl game, but it's tough to imagine how that selection will go.  My money would be on Houston (or whichever other American Athletic Conference team manages an 11-1 record) strictly based on NIU's easy schedule and performance in their last BCS appearance.  Marshall would be a great story: a return to prominence for a fallen program, but again, the schedule is even easier than NIU's.

#1 BYU, 11-1
#2 NIU 12-0
#3 Marshall 12-0
#4 Houston 11-1
#5 UTSA 11-1
#6 Fresno State 10-2
#7 Louisiana 11-1
#8 Old Dominion 11-1
#9 Utah State 11-2
#10 Navy 10-2

UCF is actually #10 in the model, but, at 8-4 (where the model projects them), I don't think we'll see them in the rankings where a 10-3 or 11-2 Utah State or 10-2 Navy team would get more love.  Boise State is in a similar situation: I think they belong in the G5 top 10, but the model projects them with 3 losses prior to playing at Fresno in the MWC Title Game.  I don't envision a scenario where a 9-4 Boise State team gets more votes in any poll than one of these teams at season's end.

There are plenty of opportunities to watch these teams head-to-head to sort it out.  NIU, Navy, and Louisiana are the only teams that do not play someone else on the list.  BYU plays Houston and Utah State (or UCF if I leave them at #10).  I think Houston might be the best of the bunch, but the cream will rise.

A few other notes about the 2014 version of the model.  Last season, the biggest problem I had was that nearly every conference champion was projected to go 12-0 and the worst team in most conferences was predicted to go winless (or 1-11 if they played an FCS team).  That was not the case this season with just 4 undefeated teams: Florida State, Oklahoma, NIU, and Marshall.  Florida State will be tested at Louisville, Oklahoma plays its toughest games at home, NIU plays at Northwestern and Arkansas, and Marshall plays at ODU (and would face UTSA in CUSA Title Game) but has nothing else of consequence on the schedule for a top 50 type of team.  UMass is the only team projected 0-12.  That's a step in the right direction.

Usually, I use the model to find those teams that are poised to have a good year that no one is really talking about (although, these days, the G5 teams are getting less love than they have in a decade, so no one is talking about any of them).  The conferences all had at least one team that surprised me and may very well be the storylines as we head into December.
American: East Carolina
ACC: Duke
Big Ten: Iowa
Big 12: Texas and TCU
CUSA: UTSA and ODU
MAC: Toledo and Buffalo
MWC: Nevada
Pac 12: Washington
SEC: Ole Miss (though same thing happened last year...)
Sun Belt: Louisiana
Independents: Navy (aided by easy schedule) and BYU

Most of these teams are not traditional powers in their conferences.  It would be nice if this played out as my model suggests.  I think the underdog is good for college sports.  Baseball fans who don't cheer for the Yankees tend to hate the Yankees.  It's the same in college football: those tired of the usual guard at top will always cheer incessantly for a dog from the bottom!