Sept. 6, 1996
Off The Practice Field...Head Coach Lou Holtz
JOHN HEISLER: Good morning. Coach Holtz is here. He will make some
opening remarks. Then he will take questions.
COACH HOLTZ: It was a
weird game. I've never had 434 yards, 25 first downs to 126 yards and 5 first
downs and ben worried about losing the football game. First of all, I
thought defensively we played very well with the exception of the third-and-38 pass.
It was just the jump ball -- Ivory was right, the guy went
up and took the ball and made a nice catch on it. Other than that
defense, we played very well. Renaldo Wynn was exceptional. I thought
Bert Berry played very well. You would be hard-pressed to find somebody
on defense that didn't play pretty well. I talked to Lamont Bryant. He
came in and did a nice job. Melvin Dansby, Alton Maiden, Corey Bennett,
Tatum and Cobbins played well. We dropped a couple of interceptions we
should have had. Kory Minor. Just everybody on defense. I thought
A'Jani Sanders played very well, strong safety and I thought that
Covington and Rossum played very, very physically on the corners. It was
just a good defensive effort.
Offensively, very disappointed with the
film. Unlike last year, I came in here after last year's opening loss
and I said we could win the next 10 or lose the next 10. We had 10
guys here do a job and one guy followed up next time -- I saw a lot more
encouraging things last year on offense than I saw this year. The one
gentleman who played very well in the offensive line was Mike Doughty.
I felt Mike Doughty really played hard physically. He played very, very
well. I thought that the encouraging thing is that we did have
434 yards and we did have 25 first downs, but, you know, the turnovers,
we weren't very consistent. We couldn't control the line of
scrimmage.
On the kicking game, I thought Jim Sanson did a very nice job place kicking. He kicked
off very well. He hit the field goals with a great deal of confidence.
He attacked it. Wasn't afraid to miss or anything else. Just went in
there and really competed very well, so that was encouraging to see.
But there is a lot of work that has to be done on both sides of the
football, predominantly on offense. Defensively, I am sure we will be tested
much more so with
the next six opponents, average 270 yards a game rushing. We did such a
fine job against Vanderbilt last year, so we will find out more about us
defensively, but basically on one game, it is really encouraging.
Offensively, I just don't know, we just can't put the ball on the ground.
Obviously some people did some real good things to have that kind of productivity, but
I thought our receivers competed well. I thought Emmett Mosley played
well, Michael Johnson made some critical catches, but I am greatly concerned
offensively, more so than I ever thought I would be.
Q. Lou, it is too early to say anything about tailback, do you know any
better idea of what Randi's status will be?
COACH HOLTZ: I don't know
what Randi's status is. The thing you have to watch is that if you come
back too early and you aggravate it, it calcifies. Once you get a
calcification in your quadricep then you are looking at eight-, nine-, 10-week
injury, but it is not that. So, we don't want to bring him back too early
just to make sure we do avoid any
calcification in it. Autry Denson will go to tailback exclusively. We
have to do that. Autry Denson obviously hasn't played as much tailback.
You would think of a sophomore jinx watching yesterday, but he did
protect the football -- if you protect the football, you
are automatically the starting tailback.
Q. Does that mean Malcolm Johnson will play split end and Emmett will
go to flanker?
COACH HOLTZ: Yes. And Emmett Mosley will go to flanker.
Cooper was supposed to play yesterday, but he didn't. He will be the
No. 2 flanker and Nelson will be the No. 2 split end and Champion will
learn both. Those will be the five that will basically try to go with
this week.
Q. Are you looking at any other lineup changes?
COACH HOLTZ: I think
that Jerry Wisne is going to get a good chance at guard. He didn't play
a whole lot, but when Jerry did, he played very well. I think we are
going to see Lou Petitgout alternate at left tackle in the game on
Saturday. I think the only fair thing is Lou Petitgout should be given
a chance to see whether he is one of our better tackles, and so
Clevenger will still start, but Petitgout will play alternate, playing
time next week.
Q. What is your practice schedule before you fallback into your
routine Monday?
COACH HOLTZ: What we will do is give them off
today. They had to go to class today to get the day off. They got back
at 2 o'clock last night or something; went to class today. They are off
today. We meet with them 10 o'clock tomorrow morning. Watch the film,
talk to them, we will chain and thrash them. Then we will go out and
practice without pads. Then they will be off Sunday; then back in the
normal routine on Monday.
Q. Lou, as you alluded today, there were some obvious positives and
negatives in the game last night. Do you feel that one outweighed the
other? The positives outweighed the negatives or vice versa?
COACH HOLTZ: I think, you know, I just look at the team and say this is where
we have to go and here is what some of the problems are and can they be
corrected? Yeah, I think they can. That was Mike Rosenthal's first
game ever at guard. Mike Rosenthal did some good things, but
he is not as consistent as we need to be. The thing that I will say on
behalf of this football team, that if you looked at the statistics and
didn't look at turnovers or the punt bouncing, we got 25 first downs against their
defense and 434 yards, which is equivalent to a 31-, 35-to-nothing victory.
And had we achieved that, I don't think I would be
sitting here saying we are going to be a pretty good football team. I learned more
in the fourth quarter when we got behind. Not
only we got behind, but how we got there. We get the ball on the one-yard line,
drive it out to the 28 and fumble, and then the defense
throws them back and you think, gee, they are going to have
to punt the football and the next thing you know, you are behind 7 to
6. And then you kickoff and get on your 25-yard line, you hit a pass
now. You are forced in 27. And yet this football team went on a 14-play drive
that covered 92 yards. I guess the 17-yard punt on that and
in 14 plays they covered 92 yards at critical times, and that showed me
an awful lot. Because somewhere down the line, you are going to be
behind in the fourth quarter. How are you going to react? What is the
temperament? What is the attitude? So, I think there is some positive
things about that. The last seven times we had the ball, just before
the half and we went, I don't know, we went from our two-yard line down
to about their 12 just before the half and kicked the field goal. The
last seven times we had the ball, we scored three points. We fumbled twice to
stop drives. We were stopped once and the game ended. And so, you
know, there were some great consistencies, but we weren't real sharp.
There is no doubt about it. As far as little things, steps, landmarks,
being in a football position, just overall offensively and then again,it was not one
of our better days. But does the positive
outweigh the negative? I never look at it. If there are negatives, it
is bad.
Q. I have a couple questions about Autry Denson. No. 1, will he -- now
that he is a starting tailback -- will he continue to return punts? No. 2,
so many of us thought he didn't look like the same guy in
certain situations in terms of hitting up in the hole last night. Was
that a result of there being nowhere to go; the guys in front of him not
getting the job done or did some of it have to do with him
practicing out at flanker so much earlier this summer?
COACH HOLTZ: I
think you are right on both accounts. I think it was a combination of
both of them. Sometimes there wasn't anywhere to go and sometimes he was
looking maybe for a little bit more yardage than what the play was
designed. A lot of times, indecision by a tailback looks like he isn't
willing to hit it up in there and that is not the case. Sometimes
indecision occurs because he sees where the hole is, but he sees
somebody filling that hole and nobody is on him. In other words, where
a guy comes free and he is in the hole and it looks like, boy, he ought
to cut back. He has pretty good peripheral vision, so you get a little
bit hesitant and consequently you don't make good decisions, but I
don't question his courage. He did protect the football and to me that
is absolutely critical.
Q. Catching punts?
COACH HOLTZ: I think Autry catches them. I think
he runs well. Whoever is going to line up at the right depth and do
those things would be the guy to run it back. Right now, I would say
Emmett Mosley. I think Autry Denson catches punts as well as anybody
that we ever had here.
Q. Part of the lack of being sharp, would you include the second half
where there was one stretch you got a little upset -- more than a little upset, I'd
say -- when two plays in a row, they drew a penalty for delay and then had
to use a timeout. What was the problem, too much time in the huddle or
what?
COACH HOLTZ: Jack, I didn't think I got upset. Everybody always talks about how
upset I get. I thought I was exceptionally cool. I watched that film
late last night; then watched ESPN. I had said something to the official
and he didn't think that was the case, but he would look at it a little
bit more. You try to fall into a rhythm there and a lot of it -- I
thought this happened. I have had this happen to me before. The ball
is marked for play sometimes a little bit more rapidly than we have
ever seen it and, as Ron said, he said the guy wasn't even down, the
ball wasn't marked for our guy to get in the huddle and the 25-second clock
was underway. I have never had a problem getting the
team in and out of the huddle and get plays called. You have followed
me for several years and we called them exceptionally quickly yesterday,
but it is just that
Ron said that the clock was starting, you know, before the ball was
marked, before we got in the huddle and consequently, it was 20 seconds. I
looked up one time, and then it was 22 seconds, you know, we were just coming
back from the punt and the clock was at 22 seconds. I mentioned it to the official.
He was very nice about it.
He said, well, he asked the other ones to take a look and see if maybe
I am marking yours a little bit quicker than the other ones. I didn't
accuse him of it and just seemed to be that way and the quarterback
brought it up. For us to have to use a timeout is something I cannot
accept and yeah, that would cause me to get upset.
Q. Lou, you talked about rhythm on offense. How much was that
disrupted when you have Robert Farmer fumble on the first series and all
of a sudden Autry Denson immediately goes back to tailback in the second
series?
COACH HOLTZ: It doesn't help any. All I
wanted to do was to be able to protect the football and to have the ball
on the ground seven times, Farmer fumbled three and Edwards fumbled
three. And the thing about Edwards, you look at it, you say, well, are
we being fair? Edwards had a pretty good history of protecting the
football over the years. But this is something that we cannot tolerate
and it is unfair to the football team, but it should not happen. I mean, if they take you to
the morgue, I mean, they should have to pry that football loose from
your rib cage. But when you get holding penalties and you get seven fumbles,
than it is just awfully
difficult to maintain a rhythm. We never really went to the option
which is probably what we should have done, should have run a little bit
more option. We only ran the option twice. Once we didn't
execute it properly. You know, all we had to do was pitch the ball and
we didn't pitch it. The other one we got a first down, but we didn't
run it particularly well, but we couldn't get outside on them. We had
trouble running up inside on them and we became predominantly a
right handed football team. We ran the overwhelming majority of our
plays and I know our opposition knows it's behind Mike Doughty and Mike
Rosenthal.
Q. With the fumbles and concerns and the penalties and everything, how
much can you build on it with the character of this football team of
what they showed on that final drive?
COACH HOLTZ: I don't question the players. You know, the early game
always scares you. Injuries are such a problem.
You are looking at Renaldo and you are looking at, you know, Kaczenski
and Doughty, you look at Powlus, you think about Cobbins and Tatum, you
don't want to get anybody injured because numbers and depth is a problem. I tell you
what, I think that they have a lot of character and they want to be
good. We will grow from it and we will benefit from it. We make no
excuses. As I say, if you look at it statistically, those were
some good games, statistically, but it didn't amount to points. We
started off with very poor field position predominantly because we let
the punt bounce or we got a clipping penalty or a holding penalty. I
don't know. Three times we started inside our 10, didn't we? You know,
that is a long way to go.
Q. Lou, a week ago you were real strong and had depth at tailback. Then
Kinder strains a muscle and all of a sudden this problem with fumbles.
What are your plans other than starting Denson, if you need help back
there?
COACH HOLTZ: Well, I think we will get that thing resolved. I
think what we have to do is we have to play Jamie Spencer a little bit
more, but Jamie has not protected the ball as well as we would like, but
he went in and played very well. He didn't play as
much as he should have but he played well. I think we got to look at
Good speed. We've got to look and keep searching. I will tell you this:
Woody Hayes had a great tailback. Ran back the opening
kickoff, I think it was against Baylor or
somebody and he is running for a touchdown -- opening kickoff opening game --
fumbled the ball on the other team's five-yard line running into the end
zone and Ohio State lost the game 17-14 -- and the guy was moved to defense
immediately. These are not going to be tolerated. I mean, it is that
simple. It is unfair to the football team, unfair to the defense, and
it is just not going to be tolerated. I think the players understand
that. They don't fumble because they want to, but nevertheless, you are
the guardian of the football. Without it, you cannot play a game. You
cannot play a game of football without a football, so, obviously, it is
the most important thing in the game. Now, if you got the most important
thing in the game, then I would expect you to protect it like you would
your scholarship.
Q. When you say "Jamie Spencer more in the game," would that be then
moving Edwards to tailback or would it be in place of Edwards at
fullback because of the fumbles?
COACH HOLTZ: We are going to protect
the football. That is No. 1. That is the only thing I am going to
share. One thing I say about Ron Powlus, Ron made some bad throws, made
more bad throws yesterday than I have seen him make, but the one thing
that I talked to Ron about was protect the football. And Ron didn't try
to make the great throw. If he erred, he is going to err on the side
where it is going to be an incompletion and you know what? That isn't
all bad, was it? Some people can say, I am going to make this great
throw so everybody can see how great I am and yeah, they hit two of
those and the third one is picked off, so I think you've got to make sure
that you just protect the football regardless of whether you are a
quarterback, runningback or fullback.
Q. If I can just follow it up one more time. You mentioned you don't
know if it is fair given the way Edwards had protected the ball in his
career at Notre Dame. Does that mean you might take a look at someone
else starting at fullback?
COACH HOLTZ: No, we wouldn't start somebody
at fullback. Give somebody else a chance to play. Let me tell you, we
aren't going to jump around -- Edwards felt terrible. Robert Farmer felt
terrible, but we are going to protect the football and we are going to
get a message across. We will get a message across -- if you protect the football
and you play without the ball
and you block, you will play. Not how many yards you make; not how many
tackles you break; if you protect the football and play without it.
Q. One other question -- is there a reason why Cooper didn't get
into the game more yesterday?
COACH HOLTZ: Yeah, there was, but it
wouldn't help me to go into it now. What happened on it, Coach Urban
Meyer was upstairs and he didn't tell me, but he wanted Cooper to
play more, but Mosley wanted to play. Mosley didn't tell Cooper he is
supposed to go in. That will be taken care of. That is why I said I
didn't really want to go into it, but.... (Laughter).
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: We knew that Evan Law lined up to the line
of scrimmage. The thing that they did differently, they didn't play a
shaded nose. They played a two-gap nose man. Using that type of
defense where they play it -- consequently, he would -- where if you
upset him sometimes he is not a factor in a play. Without being head up,
he plays very, very well and makes some good plays so they pinched
the ends much harder than they had and that we have seen. Other than
that, I thought they played a little bit more zone than I
had anticipated. But, no, they didn't do anything different. Didn't
play as much double eagle as we anticipated, but basically other than
two gap nose, they didn't do anything much different.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: Well, I think the quarterback is certainly
critical, his attitude and his confidence in the huddle. That is the
same as it is with the coach. That is why I say I try not to get upset
on the sideline because you send a message to the players, boy, we are
in big trouble. They jump up and up and throw your hat, rant and rave
and they say, boy, are we in trouble now. Same thing with the
quarterback. Ron threw a couple of bad
passes, but looking at it on film, there was a guy hitting him as he
threw and he saw the guy coming and he erred on the side of conservatism
and I appreciate that.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: I think we can be a good solid offensive
football team, but we are going to have to develop Cerasani.
He is going to have to come as tight end. I think he gives us some
things. We want play Chryplewicz as many plays he played. I think we
have to solidify certain positions in the line. I think we got
to protect the football and we got to play better without the football.
Are we capable of doing it? Yeah, I think we are. Why didn't we do it?
For a variety of reasons. Everybody is excited. Everybody just wants
to win so badly and gets overanxious and overexcited and fires off the
ball without a lot of technique. I think we are going to be limited
because we don't have great speed at wide receiver, but we can get
people open and we had them open yesterday. But we will just have to
wait and see as we go along. I intend to become a very good offensive
football team, I might add, but we aren't right now.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: The defense carried us. That
doesn't happen very often here, but they carried us and that was great. I
think that we can get some things resolved. All I want to do is get
through the first couple of weeks and see where we are and go from
there. I am not as optimistic as I was a year ago because a year ago,
it would be 10 guys really excellent and one guy not doing his job or
not being successful and so consequently, it would be a three-yard gain.
And yesterday it was a three-yard gain because of several people. I
mean, it was not a case, oh, if this guy gets hit, he is gone -- it
wasn't that at all. So I don't know how good we could be. We will have
to see.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: I really think that his struggling was to
secure the ball and it would have been nice if the backs would have
shared the same enthusiasm for that, just ball security. I cannot
emphasize how important ball security is with the quarterback. He might
have been a little overly cautious on the one option we ran that -- if
he had pitched the ball, but I think that, you know, he wasn't as sharp
as I have seen him. The field sometimes can be a little bit different.
There was pretty good size crowd. They looked like Oklahoma. Ever
been at Oklahoma Stadium? You stand on the one side and you can see
their head and shoulders on the other side. They would be running that
wishbone down -- they had a huge crowd, like Texas Field will be
basically -- they had a huge crowd and sometimes that affects your
throwing a little bit but I thought that, you know, he hit some big
passes when he had to.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: What he says was we would be okay last
week if the official didn't have a jump ball. We did. We should have
had a safety man back there with him. Can that happen on the jump ball?
Yeah, that can happen. But I think that we have got to get a little
bit better position; get a little bit more help out of the safety, but
that is going to happen. I mean, but boy they tackled well and they are
quick and they covered well and so, you know, we will live with the
other one. But I thought the secondary played very well.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: Well, I mentioned last week we tried eight
field goals from the 20 and only made one and that greatly concerned me.
I just like a kicker to be positive and to attack it. Just go attack
the ball and to be positive. And Scott just didn't hit the opening
kickoff at all and he didn't hit the field goal at all. And I felt,
well, you just go by what is in your heart. If he said well what logic
-- there is no logic for it, there is no explanation -- I just felt it in my
heart I think that guy is going to kick the ball. And he did. First
time he kicked it, I mean, boom, it exploded. Then he kicks off about
eight yards deep in the end zone. I have never seen him do that before.
But that was very encouraging what he did.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: No, one thing I said was that one thing we
have done, we have protected the ball well this fall than we had. And
we hadn't fumbled the ball. Never fumbled. Something we haven't done.
Q. (inaudible)
COACH HOLTZ: I think that the main thing that I don't
worry about is, you know, I thought he did what we asked him to do the
entire game, protected the ball. He enabled us to move the football. I
just, you know, all we want to do is win and I thought he showed an
awful lot. It was first and 27. He just you know, he never -- just the
way he handled himself and the team and was patient. You know, first we
had Emmett Mosley for six; then we had Nelson for about nine; then he comes
back and hits Malcolm Johnson for about 15. I mean, he
didn't get impatient. He didn't panic and, you know, just took what was
there and that was very encouraging. Well, I felt defensively we showed
some signs and I understand we are going to face some real explosive
offenses in the future. We didn't necessarily face one yesterday, but
let us give Vanderbilt a lot of credit, you know, they took the
Tennessee team at Knoxville last year and held them to 12 points. Every
game is going to be a struggle as much as it was last year. We don't
have the big play guy. We had 434 yards without a big play. There is
got to be something positive in that. It wasn't like you got 60 on one
play and then 40 on this one. We had it where we didn't move the ball
very well but Rocket or somebody would make a couple of big plays. We
didn't get any of those. So we are going to be a very plodding type
offensive football team. But I do think that we have a chance right
now, you know, to move forward and let us see what we do against Purdue
and see if we get better each and every week. If we eliminate the
turnovers, eliminate the penalties and poor field position, who knows
what will happen. But we are not going to be an explosive offense. We
don't have the overall speed, don't have the breakaway. We can't do
those things. That doesn't mean we can't be good. Just means we aren't
right now. Their isn't a lot of defensive coordinators that stayed up as
late as I did last night. They probably slept very sound after watching
ESPN.
Q. Not to stigmatize anybody, but if Edwards' history of protecting
the ball kind of is a plus for him, Robert Farmer's history is kind of
the opposite. Does that work against him?
COACH HOLTZ: Well, I think,
you know, you just have to go with protecting the football and Edwards
has a challenge and he has got to protect that football in the future
and Farmer has that as well, but let us look at it and let us see what
we can do to -- first of all, I think when mistakes happen it is always
very easy and very convenient to blame players - well, he fumbled and he
did this. I think before we start blaming players, I think we need, as
coaches, need to look at it and myself included, have we prepared them
adequately; have we spent enough time with the proper drills; have we
emphasized it enough in practice; have we put him in situations - let us
not put the blame on the players. Let us look at it as coaches first.
This time, this is my mistake. It is not the players. Let us not put the
blame on them. All I am saying is we fumbled the ball. It was
catastrophic. We are lucky to get out with a win, but I am not going to
put the blame on the players. I accept the blame and we will go from
here.