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Home Archives for Rich Rodriguez

Can we keep this thing going?

Posted on November 1, 2010 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Saturday night was a godsend to those of us who had already declared that the 2010 season had gone to hell in a hand basket. The Nittany Lions’ 41-31 win over perennial nemesis Michigan was a big feeling game with few significant implications to the casual observer, but we serious Penn State fans know that it provided substantive relief from the stigma of a lost season with a losing record while providing Evan Royster with the perfect vehicle for eclipsing Curt Warner’s all-time leading rushing record. Thus, high points abounded and there were virtually no negatives. It was a walk in the park, a night at the opera, a roll in the hay — all bound together in one neat little no-defense package.

Essentials for Game
Essentials for Game

Our original viewing venue was to have been The Cave, but since this Turkey had contracted a case of CroV (Cafeteria roenbergensis virus), Jackstand volunteered to perform hosting duties at Mike’s Garage. In one of two areas in which men use measurement devices to compare attributes with one another, Jackstand (aka Mike) has a 15 inch advantage over this Turkey. Show me a man who does not exhibit pride in his screen measurement and I’ll show you half a man. I still like my 50-incher, but I digress. Artificially Sweetened had carved a Pumpkin for the occasion and was looking forward to the game. So was I. After being cooped up sick for a few days, I needed to get out, too. Using visualization therapy involving mental vignettes of Penn State football coaching scenarios in important games, I strove for absolute sphincter reliability; adding a quick swig of Pepto-Bismol for good measure, AS and I climbed into the M3GEEZRmobile to descend upon Mike’s Garage.

The Penn State vs. Michigan game meant little to the Big Ten standings. Both teams are out of the championship picture. It meant nothing at all with respect to the SSMNC, as both teams now have three losses. It could have given Michigan a non-losing season guarantee and bowl eligibility, but it didn’t. Yea, verily, nothing much was on the line on Saturday night. Yet at University Park, it was given all the pomp and ceremony of “the” game.

Paternoville was erected on Monday of game week. Alas, this novelty must be getting a bit long in the tooth with the local purveyors of comestibles, inasmuch as by Friday the denizens were complaining of food shortages. A “Rally in the Valley” pep rally featuring members of the team and Joe Paterno was conducted on Friday night. Vendor and exhibit tents popped up along Curtin Road, where fans could enjoy face time and autographs from Penn State heroes of the past such as Jack Ham, Franco Harris, and Jordan Norwood. A student white-out was declared and many non-students seemed to have picked up on the white-out idea.

Given Michigan’s woes in the Rodriguez era, at season’s outset no one had envisioned that this contest would become the high point of the year. Most prognosticators automatically penciled in a “W”. However, as the 2010 campaign wore on, that “W” started looking shaky. With the embarrassment of a Homecoming loss to Illinois fresh in our minds and visions of Denard Robinson running 200+ yards invaded our partisan minds, many flip-flopped that no-brainer “W” into a pretty certain “L”. We PSU faithful began to look toward the Michigan encounter as the last remaining hope for the season. Aided and abetted by the 8 PM kickoff, the conditions were ripe for the carnival atmosphere surrounding Beaver Stadium. This was it. The big game. Do or die. The season was on the line.

It was a classic testosterone generator. By game time, Penn State was a 3.5 point underdog—in its own house. Not only did the gamblers favor Michigan but also normally friendly sports writers and bloggists including this Turkey were out there picking Michigan like a horde of journalistic rats abandoning Penn State’s sinking ship. Players and coaches were not deaf to these rumblings. Chests puffed out and pads were punched. Octogenarian head coach Joe Paterno’s voice hit notes an octave higher than usual. “Nobody beats us in our house!” A collection of fairly talented guys with no superstars and no semblance of leadership could finally band together in this common cause to escape the lethargy and ennui of a mediocre season. Here was a game worth playing.  And so, they played.

“We’re doing a good job of making a lot of quarterbacks look pretty good.” —Rich Rodriguez

Everyone had expected a high scoring game, and they got what they wanted. Led by an unintended starter due to the concussion suffered by Rob Bolden in the Minnesota game, red-shirt sophomore quarterback Matt McGloin (17-28, 250, 1 TD) and the Nittany Lions came out ready for action, attacking Michigan’s deservedly much maligned defense from the first play of the game. McGloin’s passing was generally accurate and he spread the ball around, including even the fullback in the mix. Evan Royster was the cornerstone of the running game, with 150 yards on 29 carries. Royster finally broke out of his season slump and broke Curt Warner’s record at the same time. By the time the second half rolled around, Penn State had achieved a 28-10 advantage.

That meant it was time for the coaching Kegels to begin squeezing those butt cheeks. The Lions’ defense, a mediocre bunch, would be relied upon to keep the game out of reach while the offense would play low-risk ball. Michigan won the second half 21-13, but that was not good enough. As everyone figured, Denard Robinson was virtually unstoppable in the open field, rushing for 191 yards on 27 carries. Robinson also had a decent, though not spectacular, night passing (11-23, 190, 1 TD).

In my pre-game comments, I wrote that both defenses were sieves and the keys to the game for Penn State would be playing error free and controlling the football. I’ll be damned if that’s not what happened. The game had no turnovers on either side. Penn State incurred a single penalty, an unnecessary face mask on a touchdown play committed by defender Chaz Powell. Otherwise, there were few mistakes. Penn State controlled the ball for 37:29 minutes to Michigan’s 22:31. It would be hard not to win given those parameters.

Penn State wound up with 28 first downs to Michigan’s 19, they were 10-16 on third down conversions and 2-2 on fourth downs,  and they had few troubles scoring once in the red zone. It seemed as if we were watching a “whole nuther team” than we’d been seeing this year to date. The “Joe Must Go” contingent even agreed that the coaching was excellent. We even got one of those déjà vu things going with one of those fourth down conversions in the fourth quarter, which provided the most raucous audience participation moment of the evening at Mike’s Garage.

Artificially Sweetened
Artificially Sweetened, in repose

The clock had wound down to 3:44, and with Penn State stalled at fourth and four on the Michigan 22, the Wolverines called a time out. There was still plenty of time for our foes to score twice to either tie or win the game. In this situation, the reward for risking a field goal still would have been a two score game, albeit two touchdowns, but the downside of missing the 39-yarder would have been huge. With four yards to go, lining up the offense to go for fourth down would similarly risk giving up the ball to the Wolverines with decent field position and lots of time.

I guess Artificially Sweetened (see picture) had determined that the game was well in hand. Or maybe not. Whatever was the case, she was curled up on the couch next to me encased in a blanket and snoring softly. She had been sleeping for most of the fourth quarter.

Penn State came out and lined up for the field goal. What happened next woke me up. I wasn’t sleeping, but I was lulled into semi-catatonia by Sphincter Mode football and just expected another boring place kick. Wait! Collin Wagner has the ball and is running like a coyote with a lit Roman candle up his ass. I guess it woke up our friend zbeard, too, for suddenly, as Wagner approached the first down marker, he bellowed in his Western Pennsylvania yinzer twang at 90 dBA,

“All right!! Wagner!!! WooHoo!”

AS woke up with a start and a pissed off look on her face. I tell you, if looks could kill, this one would have done it. It didn’t last long, so zbeard probably does not even know that his life was close to being snuffed out. After the commotion died down, AS managed to get back to sleep, the need for which eclipsed the need for status updates on the game. It would turn out that she had contracted a milder case of CroV from me and was mustering resources in her pre-virus shedding debilitation.

We watched the end of the game, followed by the end of the Oregon-USC game, after which zbeard decided it was time to leave and once again the commotion woke AS up. “Did we win?” she asked.

We won. It was a good win, a satisfying one. What did it mean? Here are a few thoughts:

  • Joe Paterno got one game closer to the “magical” 400 win mark. He now stands at 399. While Paterno himself pooh-poohs the significance of 400 wins, many self-proclaimed experts think that this could be the year he retires if he gets to 400 and gets to play in a bowl game. He is too many wins away from John Gagliardi’s record of 476 to shoot for it, although he could still play another season and surpass Eddie Robinson’s 408, something I think he’s likely to try to do.
  • With five wins, one more win, which is almost assured, will give the team its bowl eligibility, although whichever bowl it is won’t be any great shakes. Still, bowl eligibility is a viable goal that many thought would be unreachable after the Illinois debacle.
  • Evan Royster has now cemented his position on the Stairs of Fame at the Student Bookstore.
  • With McGloin’s workmanlike performance in the Minnesota and Michigan games in the books, a quarterback controversy could be in the works.
  • Most significantly for the football purist, it meant that these guys could get together, could open it up in a big game to get on top early, and could play with enthusiasm. McGloin and Royster have a confidence builder as a cornerstone for the rest of the season, to the extent that it involves them

Let’s wake up from the euphoria for just a moment.

Even lowly Indiana has a better defense than Michigan’s. So, get those 1994 offensive juggernaut ideas out of your head, you who flip-flop and sway like a flag in the breeze. Let’s get realistic. The Nittany Lions’ offensive line looked great against Michigan. The running game worked. The passing game worked. Does that mean that all of our season’s woes have ended?

Not hardly.

But at least now there’s some hope.

We’ll be back later in the week with a look ahead to the Northwestern game.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: college football, Joe Paterno, Michigan, Penn State, Rich Rodriguez, Sports

As Big As They Get (This Year)

Posted on October 28, 2010 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Let’s face it, folks. We need something to look forward to in a year when our beloved Nittany Lions are heading for that great homogenizer, the Mediocrity Mixmaster, the virtual appliance that blends marginal football programs into a special sauce of only passing interest to fans who are really after the Grade A beef. We have what we wanted—a game to look forward to. We’re also kidding ourselves into believing that it means something.

“Me and my friends have always been winners and that’s something you have to expect to do.” —Matt McGloin

On Saturday night before a national ESPN audience (undoubtedly much to that Mickey Mouse subsidiary’s regret), the Penn State Nittany Lions (4-3, 1-2 Big Ten) host the Michigan Wolverines (5-2, 1-2) in a battle for uncontested supremacy over the middle of the Big Ten pack. The loser descends to a 1-3 Big Ten record, which sends it back to the cellar. A “student white-out” has been declared, and students are going through the motions of constructing the obligatory “Paternoville”, both of which are now growing a bit meaningless and old due to overuse in conjunction with insignificant games such as this one. They’re even having difficulty getting the local restaurants to bring food for the poor kids.

However, that’s how far the program has sunk since its heyday. Three good years in the current decade were about it. The defense is no longer feared; the offense has been largely nonexistent. Line play on both sides of the ball has been horrendous. And to add injury to insult, you can’t even count this year’s serious injuries on your fingers, toes, and whatever other appendages you can muster.

At this year’s outset, oblivious fans and pundits viewed the Michigan game as a sure win. Their only worries were Alabama, Iowa, and Ohio State, all road games. After all, Michigan has sucked badly ever since Rich Rodriguez took over the program from Lloyd Carr, and we don’t like Rich Rodriguez, do we? (There’s this “I don’t like _________” thing applied to coaches. Tressel’s sweater sucks, Charlie Weis is too fat, Bielema is an asshole, I hate Saban, Spurrier is an arrogant prick, etc. I’ve never figured out how people can rely on such stupid, arbitrary, uninformed, superficial ad hominem assessments of coaches to arrive at conclusions about football teams. Dumbasses! But I digress).

ESPN obviously saw it as a potential cash cow when they scheduled it in prime time for a national audience. Boy, what a mistake they made. Good thing for them that only the tail end of the Auburn – Mississippi game on CBS will intersect with it. However, that game leads into Kentucky – Mississippi State on CBS and there’ll be intense intranetwork competion from Ohio State – Minnesota and Oregon – USC. Don’t be surprised if ESPN decides to cut its losses at some point and switches to another game.

This Turkey does not mean to ignore the Penn State – Michigan rivalry, which has been memorable but is on the wane. Penn State is in its decline, while Michigan has been rebuilding the Rodriguez way (I know — you don’t like him), and as soon as they figure out how to put a defense on the field, they’ll be playing at a high level again. Michigan has absolutely pwned PSU in this rivalry, with a 10-5 all-time record including 5-2 at Beaver Stadium. Let’s face it, folks—these teams just don’t like each other; they have a history. (I just slipped in a sportscaster cliche and you didn’t even see it coming.)  Alas, PSU won’t be playing Michigan for the next couple of years due to league expansion. The rivalry will be diluted.

Rodriguez has found himself a scamperwagon of a quarterback to force Tate Forcier to a lesser, but still significant, role. Denard Robinson is the leading rusher, having carried 137 times for 1,096 yards and nine touchdowns thus far. Robinson also has nine touchdowns throwing, where he is 97-143 for 1309 yards and four interceptions. He ranks 16th in passing efficiency among all NCAA Division I-A quarterbacks. But it is his slipperiness that is the big danger.  He has run for less than 100 yards in only one game this year (Michigan State), and has exceeded 200 yards against Notre Dame and Indiana. He ranks first in the conference and second nationally. Robinson had 105 yards against Iowa’s tough defense. He injured his shoulder in that game, but he says that he feels one hundred per cent and will start on Saturday.

The bad news is that the rest of the team is a mess. Defense is nearly nonexistent, ranking 104th. The Wolverines are giving up more than 440 yards and more than 28 points per game. Their turnover margin is last in the Big Ten and 87th nationally. Only one defensive player is worthy of mention: Mike Martin, a 6-2″/299 lb tackle who will be playing on Sundays. Special teams suck, too. Their kicking, punting, and return game are horrendous.

Michigan has beaten the teams it was supposed to beat and lost to the teams it was supposed to lose to (Moo U. and Iowa). They’ll probably lose to Wisconsin and Ohio State and will wind up with four or five losses, a trip to a minor bowl, and some optimism for the future.

It is being reported that Scranton sophomore Matt McGloin will be starting at quarterback for Penn State. Cory Giger of the Altoona Mirror says that Joe Paterno confirmed that McGloin will start at QB and he hopes to go with one quarterback. Rob Bolden suffered a concussion in last Saturday’s Minnesota game because his offensive line sucks, and was pulled from the game midway through the second quarter. McGloin came in and did a fair job of finishing the game, especially given that he hasn’t had any game reps this year. Kevin Newsome had been thought to be the second-string quarterback, but he has some serious deficits in reading defenses and passing. Bolden passed the cognitive function test the second time around, but Penn State has always been more concerned about a player’s ultimate well being than to play him when there is any possibility of an injury recurrence. While fans think this is a “big game”, Joe Paterno knows that it will make little difference one way or the other in Bolden’s life, whereas brain damage from repeated head trauma behind a nonexistent offensive line so close to a prior injury could have a lasting deleterious effect. This Turkey applauds Joe, the team doctors, and the coaching staff for making the tough but proper choice to not jeopardize this promising young man’s future.

What can we expect from McGloin? (We need a nickname for him. “The Scranton Shillelagh” is lame. That’s because I made it up.) He does not lack self-confidence, as was evidenced when he came in last week and tossed a touchdown pass right off the bat. He also got greedy later on, wanting to go deep, but hitting a maroon jersey. He had absolutely nothing to lose coming in off the bench unexpectedly. However, this week, he’s been practicing and planning on starting. (Even though Paterno had said that there would be a competition between him and Newsome to see who would start if Bolden isn’t able to go, Newsome has some limitations that would lead one to believe that everyone knew McGloin was the man.) Nerves might set in this time, playing in front of a 109,000 packed Beaver Stadium. Still, I like his confidence, his humility, and his take-charge attitude.

You know about the Penn State offensive line not being able to create running room, so I won’t dwell on that other than to gratuitously mention that the McCabe Sisters could do a better job in there. In this game, it would behoove the Nittany Lions to have some semblance of a running game. If they control the clock, they keep the high octane Michigan offense off the field and position themselves for the best chance of winning. I have no doubts that the coaching staff is doing their Kegels in preparation for a game with a first-time starting quarterback. They’re going to want to run up a gut that’s as nonexistent as Jenn Sterger’s on two out of three plays. It is this Turkey’s hope that they don’t shoot themselves in the foot. Evan Royster is 30 yards from becoming Penn State’s all-time rushing leader, and he’ll probably get there this week. He is a step slower than last year and he has a crappier offensive line in front of him, but he should be able to run for 100 yards against the collection of matadors (with the exception of Martin) that comprise the Wolverines’ defense—if the coaching staff decides to keep him in the game. Of late, Silas Redd and Stephfon Green have been getting lots of game reps.

Look, folks, I know you would rather see some flashy passing, especially against this incompetent defense, but the passing offense wasn’t all that great with Bolden, and if McGloin could have beaten him out for the job, he would have.

Taking care of the ball is another key concept for Penn State. With Michigan being last in the conference in turnover ratio, there will be opportunities to pounce on the ball. If the Wolverines want to shoot themselves in the footsies, let Penn State provide the pedicure so Rodriguez’s boys can see those red toenails clearly enough to blow them off, one by one. The Nittany Lions need to not nullify the opportunities provided by the opposition by making errors of their own. They need to do as good a job as was done by Jenn Sterger’s dearly departed breast implants.

This group of Nittany Lions is hard to watch. We began the season with a marginally talented group and went downhill due to a plethora of injuries to starters. Apathy and ennui, which seemed present at the season’s outset, were exacerbated by the injuries and the absence of team leadership, which I keep harping on here. Time after time, in viewing these games I look at opponents’ sidelines and see animated players pumping each other up and cheering their team on the field. Looking across to the Penn State side, I see guys standing around or sitting on the bench motionless and e-motionless. They seem to take losses in stride, probably because they don’t expect to win. Helluva attitude, if I’ve gauged it correctly. This makes it very difficult for me get emotionally engaged with these games. I want to put my foot up each and every ass standing around looking lost! But I don’t want to ruin my TV.

Hey, as a brief digression onto a related topic, I’m reading a book called Death to the BCS. It looks inside the bowl system and why a playoff series might never happen. Greed runs rampant in the BCS and the bowls; the author has done some in-depth research into the machinations of the BCS, the NCAA, and the Big Ten. Joe Paterno is mentioned throughout as a playoff advocate. I’m a little more than halfway through the book at the moment. I shall post a complete review here when I am finished with it.

Back to the game, it looks like decent football weather, at least inasmuch as the absence of precipitation makes it such. It will be partly sunny with a high of 56 in Happy Valley, and temperatures will head south to 36 after sundown. So it will be a little chilly after the game and you’ll probably partake of some fine State College antifreeze.

That brings us to the moment you’ve all been waiting for, the Official Turkey Poop Prediction for the 2010 opus of the Penn State – Michigan game. The spread opened at Penn State favored by 1.5 but bettors pushed it the other direction, with Michigan now favored by 3. I suspect that with McGloin announced as the PSU starter, more late action will come in on Michigan’s side of the ledger, so look for that spread to widen by game time Saturday. The over/under was hard to find. It was off the board at the books I normally check first, but I finally found a joint that was taking action at 53. This, coupled with the spread of 3, suggests a final score in the neighborhood of 28-25. This Turkey doesn’t see it that close at all. First of all, if Robinson is 100%, the Wolverines will surely score more than 28 points against Penn State’s crippled defense, which was never any good even without all the injuries. The Maize and Blue put up 28 points against Iowa’s stout defense with Robinson out for part of the game. Meanwhile, Penn State hasn’t looked all that great on offense, but against the Gophers, who suck as badly as Michigan on defense, they managed to put up 33. When your offensive MVP is probably your place kicker, you know you suck. I think Robinson can equal his 270 yard game here and I think Michigan wins ugly. Let’s say Michigan 45, Penn State 31, and, by all means, take the over!

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: college football, Denard Robinson, Jenn Sterger, Joe Paterno, McCabe Sisters, Michigan, Penn State, Rich Rodriguez, Sports

Rodriguez Broke NCAA Rules, Players Say

Posted on August 29, 2009 Written by The Nittany Turkey

For the hapless Michigan Wolverines, thing are going from bad to worse. Several players have alleged that head coach Rich Rodriguez has routinely broken NCAA rules by creating an onerous off-season practice schedule. The story was reported in the Detroit Free Press. An NCAA investigation could result in lost scholarships, probation, and curtailment of practice time, if Michigan is found to be at fault.

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Filed Under: General, Penn State Football Tagged With: college football, Rich Rodriguez, Sports, University of Michigan, Wolverines

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