QUESTION: Coach we talked about after the game your offense and
your defense combined played probably was the best we've seen all season. Can you talk about how things are
starting to come together for you guys and how you go forward from here?
COACH GROH:
We've seen, I would say, two and a half games of positive progress, say
half because not really speaking of the 30 minutes of that third game. But there was a good deal of positive
progress just not enough to call it a complete game obviously with the
result.
So we just, you know, we seem to be kinda getting our
legs underneath us. It's a long
ways to go yet but the key thing now is for us to establish for ourselves what
level of consistency of performance we're going to get.
To have done it a few times doesn't necessarily lock
it in so we're going to have two really ‑‑ I think we feel significantly
challenged to try to step up and do that.
QUESTION: With two big cornerbacks who play man-to-man,
does that allow you to call plays differently on defense?
COACH GROH:
Their size is very beneficial, Zach, but really the key thing there is
their athletic skills. We would
probably do a number of the same things with Ras‑I and Chris if they didn't
have the same size but if they had the same athletic ability. Certainly we try to take advantage of
what they do have and whether we're playing zone or man, some of which we play
both, whether they're playing zone or man we want to accommodate what those
guys do best.
QUESTION:You started the season with a large pool of receivers
that were all fairly young. Who
have you seen step up and emerge as the season has gone on?
COACH GROH:
Clearly Kris Burd is making some plays for us, and he would be probably
the one to put in that category. I
don't think there has been anybody else with enough plays to say that they're
in that category yet, but Chris has done it here now three games in a row so he
would be deserving of going into that "emerging receiver"
category.
QUESTION: Kris Burd was not a guy who had a lot of
major-college offers coming out of high school. What would have been the major
knock on him?
COACH GROH:
He was, just raw vertical speed.
Chris was ‑‑ we're very familiar with his program. He was in our camp, and we can see what
his work ethic was, and how he took instruction. He was one of those players, Jeff, as with many that just
fit us.
QUESTION: He may not have that raw talent but he seems -
COACH GROH:
He's got good quickness and he knows how to find openings in it and
we've had a lot of good players here that were not necessarily high named
players, but were guys who fit us well, fit our program, fit this school and
that's an important thing in putting your team together.
QUESTION: Jameel has a lot of experience and so does Chris
Turner. It seems like the offenses have caught up in the ACC. Is that strictly
because of the quarterback experience?
COACH GROH:
You're exactly right, 11 teams played Saturday and eight of them scored
40 points or more. I know
that ‑‑ I watched the Maryland/Wake Forest video, I saw our game, I saw a
little bit of Florida State/Georgia Tech, I read about Duke/N.C. State, and in
every one of those cases ‑‑ and I'm sure I'm leaving some out but in every
one of those cases the quarterbacks had some real knock‑out days.
And usually that high scoring is a function of
quarterback play. I thought Riley
Skinner was outstanding, Lewis at Duke to go 40-for-50 must have had some great
throws, so it was certainly a function of that.
QUESTION: Coach, it seems like Jameel and Vic have
effective chemistry out there. Is
that what you and Greg envisioned when they were out there together it would
look?
COACH GROH:
I would like to ‑‑ I think over time here, Jay, we'll see what type
of connection they have. A lot of
it was a function of Vic was pretty open.
Most of us would have had good chemistry with Jameel on that play. (Chuckles.)
QUESTION: Coach, you've run a lot of two tight end sets in the
last couple of weeks, and there is only four tight ends on the roster, if you
wanted to stick with those, is Rashawn a true tight end or would you have to go
to some different looks if one of those guys were to go down?
COACH GROH:
No, he's a back.
QUESTION: Vic is not an experienced screen receiver. You mentioned the ‑‑ is it good to
have a guy who has been through it with so many young guys on your receiving
core?
COACH GROH:
The answer to many questions like that, Paul, is you certainly wouldn't
say "no."
So if it's not "no" I guess it's
"yes" but how "yes" it is, how much they're paying
attention to what a veteran player does, but one of the beneficial things for
young players is ‑‑ whether it's within the total team or within their position
to see those players who really know how to go about their business and just to
watch them and find out, hey, that's how you do it in college football, that's
how you come in early and watch video, that's how you train in the offseason and
that's how you practice for every play because there is a big difference,
okay?
One thing, the competition just for playing time is
so much greater. Most of the
players who were recruited to play college football it's because they were the
best player on their team, certainly the best player at their position, as such
they were probably playing pretty early in their career and now all of the
sudden the line at their position is full of guys exactly like them.
So how do you compete with playing time with the guys
on your team and the other guys got there the for the same reason so how to
practice and play on a consistent basis is kind of a new thing.
Now this is a player that had that attitude when he
got there. Perhaps Vic profited by watching some other players, but he was one
of those guys already. He was a
high‑energy, high‑motor player.
Jeff asked about Kris Burd before having worked with him many camp we
could see he was one of those players, so when I talked about guys that were
good fits for us, both of those players would fall into that category.
QUESTION: You have commented and the players have, too, that
the team has practiced better and that these good performances the last two
weeks are a result of better work in practice. Given that you're not always one's-versus-one's, what makes
a good practice?
COACH GROH:
I guess it's probably ‑‑ the last question and the answer would
segue right into this. Players
need to learn how to practice at this level, and collectively and, therefore,
the team does every year, the more veteran players the more players n whom it
should be engrained, but college football has such a rotation that I would say
most every year, most teams could talk about the young players that they have
on it. Essentially 25 percent of
your team is new every year anyway, so I think it's a standard thing. It's part of the life circumstance of
college athletics.
But it's how to really develop that mentality as an
individual player that every play of every practice is important and players
who practice on that basis and learn how to "rev it up" they tend to
play that way in the game. We do
tend to do a good deal of ‑‑ during certain segments of each practice
working each ‑‑ working our first units against each other for the competitive
nature of it. We ask each player
to challenge the player on the other side, challenge him to perform, in doing
so we will find out how well the play really does work.
If you're just a guy absorbing the block or a
blocking dummy over there with a real helmet on then we don't know whether the
play is working or not and, plus, it doesn't force the guy who is trying to
execute the play to get any better.
I know a number of ‑‑ we did a great deal of
that last year and a number of the players have commented about how that level
of competition was a factor in improvement of the play of the team throughout
the year. So we tend to do a good
amount of that.
QUESTION: Coach, what elements of the spread have you retained
and do you notice a comfort level in the players kinda going back to what you
guys have done over the last few years and what they've done over the last few
years?
COACH GROH:
We certainly have a lot more accumulated turns in some of the things
that have been successful over the years so obviously the veteran players, the
guys who have been around have a better sense of it.
Now, Tim Smith and Torrey Mack and Colt Phillips and
those kind of players, they don't know any difference. They weren't here for the old and they
haven't been here very long for the new.
So it's only a certain element of the team to which that would apply
anyway. But I would say there is
probably a good blend of the two circumstances right now.
QUESTION: Al, can you talk about Simpson, what you think makes
him such a good back? What made
you go after him? He seems like
he's not the stereotypical back that you usually get.
COACH GROH:
Yeah, the two things about him ‑‑ really, Jerry, it's the same
answer to both questions. Amongst
the things that we do like in backs and in all positions, but amongst the
things we like in backs is versatility. As a high school player, he caught a
lot of passes, he returned kicks, he ran from scrimmage, he played some
defense, he was a good basketball player, you know, he ran track, he was an all‑around
athlete who showed a variety of athletic skills and football skills.
To bring up ‑‑ Wali Lundy had a good level of
versatility, one year he caught over 50 passes, scored 51 touchdowns, Alvin Pearman
was a good kick returner for us, good on screens, good from scrimmage, so we
prize versatility in that position, particularly that one and he has good
vision, sees the flow of the defense and has a good sense of when that flow is
going to continue and that there is a backdoor cut and maybe when that flow
isn't fast enough to cut him off in the direction that he's going.
When he makes good, quick decisions that's when he
runs in the fashion in which he has been running. As we discussed, whatever did it ‑‑ and I'm not sure he
really has an answer to it, either, but he got away from that type of
definitive cutting last year, but when he played that way, in '07 and the way
he's been playing this year he's more definitive with it. One of the things you have to do with a
player like that or with any back but is not overcoach the cuts, because not
every cut is going to be perfect.
There will be some that you might want to have back but as we have over
the years reminded all the different running back coaches, if most of us can
see it the way those running backs can, then we would have been running
backs. But none of us can really
see it that way.
There is certain "you shouldn't do's" in
there but more or less you have to give 'em their head and let 'em make their
decisions. So it was those very
things, Jerry that attracted us to him.
QUESTION: Coach, what have you seen from Maryland so far in the
season that worries you?
COACH GROH:
One is their return game.
Torrey Smith, he's one of the really exciting dynamic players in the
Atlantic Coast Conference and he's one of those versatile players of which we
speak. He has runs reverses, he's
caught the ball, he's returned kicks, he does a variety of things.
He's not just a receiver, but he's got good
elusiveness, he's got good vertical speed. Early in his career I think he's around 4th or 5th in the
history of the ACC in kickoff return yardage.
This isn't about the coach has to talk about who is
good on the other team, the numbers speak for themselves early in his
career. In all likelihood if all
of us keep kicking the ball to him if he's 4th or 5th by the time he's finished
he has a chance to be at the top.
Dynamic player. They have a
veteran quarterback who knows the offense very well who has experience and has
had some real big games with them.
Defensively they're certainly out of the norm from
what we have played against here recently which have been more conventional 4‑3
defenses, so we have work to do on that particular phase of things.
QUESTION: I think ever since you put in that punting formation
for the Gator Bowl you have not had a blocked punt, and you've had some good
punts from the rugby punt. Why did
you go to it and how do you decide which formation to use?
COACH GROH:
Doug, it got our attention because it was becoming increasingly popular
around the country. Every time we
would turn on a video either we were ‑‑ not every time but frequently we
were putting the video on and getting ready to play against it.
QUESTION: The rugby punt?
COACH GROH:
Just the overall shield punt and the elements that go with it. So we were having to get ready for it
or the team that we were preparing for had just played against it, and one of
the things that ‑‑ of the two things that were noticeable about it with
teams all over is that there were very few punts getting blocked and very few punts
getting returned. One of the
things it does ‑‑ the spread punt ‑‑ the history of the spread punt,
it came about when the NFL changed the rules.
And when the rule change said that you could only
release two players down field before the snap of the ball. So once that rule change came, the NFL
said, well, if we can only release two players before the kick of the ball we
better put them out there wide where they have a lot of room to release, thus
was born the modern spread punt, it wasn't because coaches said this was the
very best way to do this, it was because the rules dictated that was the only
way to it.
Also by rule now ‑‑ it's not the same rule in
college football but it's the same protection but de facto is makes it
happen. And that requires that the
blockers on the line of scrimmage have to retreat in order to make the
different pick‑ups, if you're retreating you're not getting off on the snap of
the ball. So what this formation
does is because of the shield behind and the different set of rules it allows
all the blockers, whether they have an assignment or they're uncovered to come
aggressively off the ball and therefore there is quicker vertical coverage down
the field on kicks.
So that is certainly an advantage, and it's an
advantage to be moving forward rather than be moving backwards. And with that as has happened with lots
of different things, whether it's an offense or defense, one an idea starts and
coaches take it and are creative with it, then grows the variety of different
formations that we're now seeing.
You all probably saw the most extreme from Indiana
the other day in which they had a few players around center and quite a few spread
out wide with the idea being if the defense doesn't accommodate those players
there is the threat that somebody is going to catch the ball and throw it to
one of them so you have to cover them as if they are wide receivers, which, in
fact, they are, and that takes players away from rushing the punter, at the
same time it has more players spread out and by the style of punt now are able
to take off on the snap of the ball so you get more coverage from them.
So probably if you ask the question of most people
who were employing that, everybody's answer would be similar to that.
QUESTION: What about the rugby punt?
COACH GROH:
That came about as another part of the creativity and the innovation
that people did with it. It was to
change ‑‑ as teams do with their quarterback that sprint out in order to
change the passing point so that particular pressures that are aimed at the
middle of the pocket now maybe the quarterbacks outside the pocket and it
negates the pressure, it's the same idea, teams do it to try to change the kick
point as well as get a type of kick that has that roll which, again, makes it
more difficult to return and cuts down on that particular challenge.
QUESTION: It seems that Chase Minnifield does not have the
fair catch in his repertoire. Is that something that comes from the coaches or
is it hoping
to get a halo violation or is he just doing it?
COACH GROH:
There is no official halo violation anymore, player has to be given a
reasonable opportunity to catch the ball which you can see that
"reasonable" means that the defender can get quite close to him, it's
really the one call that doesn't occur, which is actual kick interference. He's got a lot of confidence in his
ability to catch it, he's got a good level of courage to deal with whatever is
impending so we just ‑‑ it's one of those things we kinda leave it up to
him and we talk about what makes good decisions.
It's not a question of Laissez-faire coaching but
it's not micromanaging the circumstance and allowing a player to use his
skills.
QUESTION: How familiar were you with Torrey Smith in high
school and did you foresee him becoming the player he is now?
COACH GROH:
Clearly if we foresaw him being the type of player that he is now, he
would be returning kicks for Virginia.
So, we're not above admitting that there is a player that certainly has
turned out to be superior to what many people thought, including
ourselves. He's ‑‑ regardless
of what the circumstance was in the past he's a superior college football player.
QUESTION: Would Simpson need to practice to play or does a
player with his experience even need to practice before a game?
COACH GROH:
Pretty much would be the case.
You would want him to familiarize himself ‑‑ mostly, Zach, in the
area of pass protection. The runs
are going to be pretty much the same.
Particularly because Maryland does bring a variety of different‑looking
schemes which will be challenging, not only to the offensive line, but
particularly to the backs.
Those are the guys who often have the dual pick‑up,
lineman, if they stay with their roles ‑‑ where linemen get in trouble is they
get disconcerted by different moving parts, and a guy will get off a play he
should have stayed on because he thinks, oh geez, I've got to take this
guy. Backs often have a lot more
dual pick‑up or moving linebackers, and they've got to sort it out so that will
be the particular issue there.
QUESTION: Now that Vic is playing both ways, how do you manage
his practice time?
COACH GROH:
Kind of like a tennis ball.
You know, we do, we kind of bat him back and forth from field to field,
and we do try to stagger things, so in the past for example both offense and
defense would be working on goal line at the same time and both would be
working on third down.
Because he's not an integral part of either goal line,
but is important to third downs, maybe the offense will work on goal line while
the defense works on third downs, and he will go over to the defense, and when
the defense is working on goal line and don't need him, he goes up to the
offense for third down. And we
just try to make sure that he gets the plays that he needs on each side. So, it's worth a few more minutes of
organization because he brings a lot to both sides, we just have to ‑‑
it's not complicated, it just takes time management.
QUESTION: How much of Jameel's improved play the last couple of
weeks is kinda him getting the rust off, how much of it is the blended offense
that he was more familiar with?
How much is the running game and maybe how much is his preparation has
gotten better?
COACH GROH:
Preparation, running game, rust, and familiarity, I would say about 25
percent of each.
QUESTION: Coach, after the game you alluded to the fact that
going up to College Park is typically one of the more challenging experiences
you guys go to every other year.
What is it about this rivalry, understanding you take every game the
same, what is it about this rivalry that makes it different?
COACH GROH:
In most conferences, Mark, when you have border teams play, it's usually
pretty traditional rivalry, in the Big 12 you've got Kansas and Missouri; in
the Big 10 you have Michigan and Ohio State, Indiana and Illinois, so most of
those border school rivalries are amongst each schools most significant,
whether it's students come from both sides of the border or people graduated
from one school and get a good job offer in the state of the other school,
that's pretty common in most of these rivalries.
QUESTION: Coach, you touched on Jameel's success over the past
couple of weeks. How much better
do you think he can get over the course of the rest of the season?
COACH GROH:
Let me get my crystal ball up here! (Chuckles.) We
certainly don't want to put a cap on that, but that would be hard for me to
speculate. If I could do that I
would buy stocks low and sell high.
QUESTION: You mentioned Mikell's variety of athletic
experiences he had in high school, another one of your players like that is Cam
Johnson. Can you talk about how
he's progressed in his first season as a linebacker?
COACH GROH:
Yeah, really, you really have wrote the first paragraph of my answer,
just talking about if people are familiar with him, you know what David was
talking about, he's one of the outstanding ‑‑ in one of the outstanding basketball
leagues in the country, was a real good player, most are familiar with how good
DeMatha is historically in that league, well Gonzaga is in that same league,
they went 37‑0 and won the big Catholic School national tournament at the end
of the year.
And he was one of the best players on the team. Most of his high school was at wide
receiver and safety, but he was a player with a lot of athletic skill and
obviously a lot of height and good versatility that just the way nature usually
works we could see was going to grow out of all of those things, Mother Nature
lived up to her reputation and fortunately that was the case and he's gone from
being in the lower 200s when we first met him to being in the plus 250s now and
obviously bringing that same level of athletic skill.
Sports makes ‑‑ basketball was the same way, we
could see that when you watched him play, he had a sense of how to move and how
to get open, when to be off-side on rebounds and when to be in front of the
basket, sports made sense and ball movement and all those things and it's been
the same way in football, the game makes sense to him.
There is something to be learned on his part every
day, even if it's not something that's taught David in the meetings it's
something that happens on a play in practice that you couldn't forecast but now
that it's there, there is a good teaching moment. He gets it right away.
Whereas there are some players particularly those that are at a
relatively new position for them, maybe you've got to go in and show 'em the
video the next day and explain it to 'em, he gets it right there.
If you'll repeat that play, make a mark on the
practice schedule, okay, if we have time I'm going to repeat play 14 so Cameron
gets a chance at what we just talked about, if you repeat play 14, he's usually
right on it. Same thing in the
game when we talk about things on the sideline during the game that have just
occurred, if they occur later in the game or in a subsequent series he's
usually on it pretty good.
So his capacity to do that is excellent. There is a lot more for him to be
exposed to in that his season was pretty well cut short last year he's a second‑year
player without the benefit of most of his first year, so we're very well
pleased with the position that he's in right now and see significant growth
potential within that ‑‑ I would say on a daily basis because of his
capacity to get it.
Really kind of the way he was, we ‑‑ I remember
the day that Mike London and I went to the school. I walked out like, whoa! I loved this guy!
The action wasn't that ‑‑ it was probably more basketball action on
him than football at that particular point but you're right. When we saw ‑‑ I mean that was one
of the guys who fit what we're looking for, it wouldn't have made any
difference if nobody was interested in him, he fit what we were looking
for.
QUESTION: Since we started the press conference Ras-I Dowling was
named defensive player of the week and Torrey Smith was the specialist of the
week for Maryland.
COACH GROH:
That will be a good match‑up.
QUESTION: Another
guy from the Catholic League, Nick Jenkins, his stats don't jump off the page,
but what kind of year is he having?
COACH GROH:
Very good. He's one of the
tough‑minded and physically gritty players on the team. Of course that's necessary to play that
position. It wouldn't fit
everybody but he really likes it.
And it's a position which some players can have ‑‑ whether it's as
a college player, NFL player it's a position in which some guys can have a
terrific career and it might be their only position. He's one of those players. You know, he's clearly not ‑‑ he's a defensive lineman
who is a nose. He's not an outside
rush end but it fits him well and he's going to have ‑‑ he's the kind of
player we need.
And we're the kinda team that players like Nick need,
because we've got a spot for them that's unique to which most are offering him
and he's got a talent unique to what we're looking for, so we're fortunate to
have him and to think he has so many more games ‑‑ he's played very well
at each stage for a player who is in the early stages of his career, which I
guess until a guy kind of belies the idea that just because a player is not a
five‑year veteran he can't be a proficient player.
QUESTION: What would you consider the best nose tackle that you
had here?
COACH GROH:
By the time he was finished, Andrew Hoffman was a good nose tackle. He was a player that really didn't fit
the pro-type body wise ‑‑ he would have been a good end for us, also, but
we had other ends at the same time and it was a way for us to get everybody in
there at the same time.
QUESTION: Coach you talk about your five games in your season,
in the ACC you're one of two teams who doesn't have a loss in the conference,
talk about the conference play.
COACH GROH:
Well it looks like it's shaping-up as some of the previous races that at
the early stage, it's anybody's race.
The two divisions look a little different but in any case it still looks
like it's going to be a run to the finish. I haven't actually seen a lot of the teams play very much,
so I know the results but ‑‑ especially those teams that we haven't had
reason to overlap with their opponents and their videos, I haven't seen 'em
very much.
As I say, I know what the standings look like, I
don't know how some of the teams are playing so it would probably be outside my
level of awareness to try to tell you much else about that.
QUESTION: Coach, due to the success you had recently and the
success that you've had against Maryland, do you feel that there is confidence
around your team heading into this game?
COACH GROH:
I think the players feel positive about themselves concerning what
they've done the last few weeks, and they can see themselves getting
better.
You know, the players are pretty smart, they've got
eyes and ears and they can see ‑‑ they don't always need the coach to tell
'em. When a player can see that he
can do things better than he could do them before, sure, that makes everybody
feel better, whatever we're doing, so I think we feel positive about ourselves
in those circumstances. I think
it's unlikely that any of us feel that previous games with Maryland have any
bearing on how this game is going to go.
This one is about the level of preparation that we have, how everybody
understands and embraces the plan and most particularly how we execute on Saturday.
QUESTION: In speaking about player development you said there
were certain players that you could see would be contributors to the team but
would not start until around mid‑season.
Is that starting to happen?
Who are those players?
COACH GROH:
We spoke last evening, there was a question about Zane Parr, he
certainly is one of those players.
He was a few plays ‑‑ actually last year on the nickel and dime was
a player that because of his athletic skills we could see where he would fit
but the role didn't really take.
His playing time decreased there. He wasn't getting much time on the
regular defense, then he hurt his knee and was lost for the season. Spring practice was okay, but found his
footing and got some traction with his game and has come on very strong, doing
a real nice job. He's one of the
players that here repeatedly, Zach on Thursdays ‑‑ the Thursday video
should highlight the teams preparation and the players' preparation, in other
words, everything that's been covered during the course of the week happens on
Thursday. There have been a number
of Thursdays, man, where we said, wow, this guy has had one of the better
practices of the week.
So he is one of the those players who it was
discussed earlier about practices and the like, he's one of those that has
learned how to practice like a college player. He's prepared for the games and improving his game and as
y'all can see by watching him play it's showing up in terms of production.
He would be a player to come to mind. I would say that we talked about chase,
somebody asked about Chase Minnifield, but he's one of those players that we
can see that happening with, Landon Bradley on the offensive line is one of
those players who's game continues to progress. He went against that Quinn down at North Carolina, who is a
terrific player and it won't get much more challenging than that for him over
the course of the rest of the season and the next few years, but that was a big
challenge to be exposed to and then he came back with these two guys this week
who had real credentials, those two kids from Indiana that wasn't the coach
talking about, we're playing against the greatest guys in the history of the
universe, these guys had credentials, they had been nominated for national
awards and they flipped him, so he and Will got each of them during the course
of the day, he handled that nicely.
He's another player similar to what we talked about with Cam Johnson,
he's another player amongst his skills are his ability to take instruction and
put it to use and that's a significant skill in a kid becoming a good
player.
Those are the things that no rating service can tell
you. For that matter, lots of
coaches in the evaluation, it's difficult to come across that. In fact, unless you really know the
people that you're asking the questions of, it's really hard to get that. You certainly can't get that by
watching a video. If you get
somebody's combine times, that can't tell you how well the player can pick
things up. We've had a couple of
players here over the course of time that have been amongst our best ‑‑
have had amongst the best grade point averages on the team. They couldn't play because they just
couldn't get the football, make those split‑second, on‑their‑feet
decisions. But they're on the
academic honor roll. It's a
different type of decision-making.
And when Landon is one of those players at the early stages of his
physical development and not ready to go into the game it was apparent that he
was going to be able to play the game.
That's another thing that attracted us to Cam even when he was much
smaller than he is now, he had good athletic ability for the position and he
was really ‑‑ he was a sponge for information, and Dave was working with
him in the camp just as he is here.
He was very impressed with how quickly he could learn
things and that's such an important thing at that position. Those are a few of the guys that I'm
sure I've left out a few, they're the only guys that are improving on the team,
Zach we probably would not have gotten to where we are but those are guys that
are significant.
QUESTION: Every team has lots of guys that are cause for
concern, but when you face a team that has its backs against the wall, is that
something extra that you look at?
COACH GROH:
No, we go ‑‑ I don't really ‑‑ look, I'm having a hard time
coaching this team, you know, just taking care of one team. I don't have much time to try to think
about what's going on with another team.
I think most coaches are probably that way. Coaching this team is a full‑time job much less trying to
think about the mind‑set of another team.
From that standpoint since you only get 12 chances at
this, I think we're pretty accurate in assessing that every team is going to be
pretty desperate to win every game.
How many of those can you afford to give away?
QUESTION: You
were spoiled early in your tenure by having a quarterback who completed around
70 percent of his passes. Is Jameel capable of completing 60 percent of his
passes on a steady basis?
COACH GROH:
Well, he's had those kind of ‑‑ he had those kind of games in '07
and principally as he began to pick it up, but kind of back to what David was
asking about the quarterbacks in the league, one of the things that you can see
with ‑‑ every year is there are certain teams because of their stature in
college football, they got a good quarterback every year. USC has a good quarterback every
year. Ohio State has a pretty good
quarterback every year. Texas has
a good quarterback, those kind of places, that's where the quarterbacks are
going. All the rivals, top-5
quarterbacks in the country, that's where they are.
There are a lot of teams that run their offense and
defense about the same from year‑to‑year.
That is pretty good. But
the results aren't always the same.
A team that I would cite to you would be Michigan State. Michigan State has been ‑‑ the
reason I cite them is because I know some of their people, I follow what
they're doing, the secondary coach there is a guy that I once coached.
Everybody out there tells me they're doing a really
good job coaching, they're recruiting really well. Their quarterback last year is now the back‑up quarterback
in New England so they're going through a quarterback transition, they're
probably not scoring like they did when they had a guy who was good enough to
be Tom Brady's back up. But that
doesn't mean they're not playing the same quality of overall football.
And I didn't know this until last week but somebody
told me in the Notre Dame versus Michigan State game is Michigan State had a
guy open and he overthrew him. If
Brian Hoyer was still playing for Michigan State he wouldn't have overthrown him
and they would have had a great victory.
I think you see that with the great places, always looking for that type
of player. We're fortunate to have
a player like Matt Shaub who was 70 percent yesterday, against the highest
level of competition so he's staying up there around 65 percent or so
throughout his career.
We were talking about quarterbacks with the staff the
other day and I mentioned Chad Pennington, who I am familiar with because we
drafted him when I was with the Jets, and I happened to hear this recently, but
for all the great quarterbacks in the league, Sammy Vaughn, Johnny Unitas, Joe
Montana, Dan Marino, Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Chad Pennington has the highest
completion percentage of any quarterback in the history of the league.
It's no coincidence that every team that Chad's been
on has been a good team. Marshall
won two or three national championships when he was there. If you're in one of those places and
Chad Pennington is there, that's your time to make hay because they don't come
around all the time. So we're in
that circumstance and the teams that are scoring in our league are teams that
either have high‑talent quarterbacks or kids who have been in the system for a
long time and have developed their skills and got the reads and know where to
go with the ball and they're proficient in their accuracy and that's what
produces points.
It's those guys that you can get open and they hit
'em when they're open. And you try
to scheme up a lot of stuff and you get 'em open and you just miss 'em, you
don't miss 'em by much you just miss 'em, it affects what the scoreboard looks
like. That's how points get
scored. He's had those kind of
games, he had 'em a couple of years ago, what I think Jameel's up side is, I've
always been a Jameel fan. We've
always felt that he had tremendous ability to have a highly versatile game,
which he has demonstrated on many occasions. I would certainly never be the person that would put any
limitations on how high his game can rise.
QUESTION: Al, Will Barker was talking about how frustrated the
line me know have been with themselves and how determined they were to get
things turned around in practice.
Can you sense that frustration as a coach? How do you guys go about helping them to get to where they
feel like they need to be?
COACH GROH:
Jerry, I wouldn't say I sense it as frustration. I guess that's what was the catalyst to
what I did see. Staff wise what we
did see was very determined effort on their part, but which really didn't make
that group any different than a lot of other positions that wanted to see our
team play better.
It was a real strong determination just to keep
grinding and I think that's occurred collectively within each position either
from the reinforcement or whatever that the players got from their teammates to
do so.
QUESTION: How cognizant are you of crowd size, and what role
does the role of a college coach have in responsibility of helping to put
fannies in the seats?
COACH GROH:
The head coach's role is however extensive it's asked to be. Whether it's in the area of academic
counseling or recruiting or boosters, or fans in the stands. We are happy for the fans. We are appreciative for the fans who
are there for us and for the players and as you can see this is a high‑energy,
high‑character bunch of kids who are deserving of all the support that anybody
would choose to give them.
QUESTION: Maryland has been using Turner a little more to run
the last couple of weeks or so.
How much of a different dimension does that give them and how much of a
different look is that for you?
COACH GROH:
He's been effective doing that and has opened some things up and
certainly when a player has shown at that position just as we do with our
players sometimes, those one‑back formations are actually two‑back formations,
you can't consider the quarterback just to be the quarterback. We dealt with that in a number of games
this year so it's certainly a factor.
That's part of the thinking of some of those teams that employ some
degree of this so‑called "Wildcat" formation.
Those quarterbacks who are in the pocket as a
quarterback, if they've got another dimension it makes them that much more
difficult and so, too, do those backs that the teams but back there in this
Wildcat, if the player has the capability to throw the ball it makes for ‑‑
no matter who is back there, it's the old deal about having balance with the
things that you can do and the more versatility in the scheme the more
challenging it is for the defense.