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Tulane 45, South Florida 10

Tulane played its most complete game since destroying SMU on a Thursday night in November of 2022, The Green Wave did everything well for four quarters, with the brief exception of a late first-half touchdown drive out of nowhere for South Florida. This is the team we always thought it could be, with the addition of a quarterback in Darian Mensah who probably is better than anyone thought the Wave QB would be after the graduation of four-year starter Michael Pratt. Great running back in Makhi Hughes. Explosive trio of receivers in Dontae Fleming, Mario Williams and Yulkeith Brown. Experienced offensive line that pushed South Florida around. Deep defensive front that had as many sacks in one game (six) as in the first four combined. Playmaking linebacker in Tyler Grubbs.

Tulane will be favored in every game the rest of the way if it keeps winning, but it probably will need to win at Navy on the third Saturday of November to reach the AAC title game. Navy has a easy schedule, and Army has a preposterously easy schedule, so one loss to the wrong team could prove fatal.

Jon Sumrall, Darian Mensah, Fleming and Gerrod Henderson talked after the game.

SUMRALL

"Excited for our guys to open up conference play to get to 1-0 against a team that I think is really on the ascend. They've put together a good roster. They've got the second biggest NIL budget in our league, so we need to catch them. If we catch them, we might win bigger, but they are doing good things, and I'm really happy for our guys. We talked all week about we hadn't played a complete game in any phase, and we haven't really played great complementary football in the first four games. I challenged the guys this week and this morning at the hotel last night. We just brought up like, hey, now's the time to kick it in gear. The preseason's over, the non-conference is over, now it's time to go figure out how to make a statement and play big-time football. I think you felt us do that today in a lot of ways. We ran the ball efficiently. The quarterback, Mensah, played really clean. Ty (Thompson) did some good things with the ball in his hands as well. We controlled the clock, which against a team like that that wants to play with tempo is so vital. We had 528 yards of offense on 73 plays. They ran for 206 yards on Alabama and ran for 26 today, so I'm very proud of our guys' effort.

:All right, it's one game. We are going to celebrate tonight. We had a lot of fun, and then tomorrow we'll get back to work because it's going to be over, but I'm pleased for our guys, pleased for our program and grateful to the fan base for turning out and excited to get to 1-0 in conference."

On the complete performance being the best so far:

"Yeah, without question. Southeastern Louisiana game we won 52-0 but I didn't feel like we played great. We were just the better team. Kansas State we played really well at times. First half we played well, third quarter we played awful and the fourth quarter we fought but we didn't finish. Oklahoma, we spotted them 21 points right out of the gate, and then last week we sort of slogged it out. It was a tough mudder type game where it was like, all right, how did we find a way to win even though we didn't play pretty. Today we played really efficiently in all three phases. We rushed the quarterback better than we've rushed the quarterback, played good on special teams, the kicker performed well. There were a couple of things I was disappointed in. The drive right before the half, I was really frustrated with because we gave up a double move. They didn't complete it, but they should have scored a touchdown on us, and we didn't play the tempo well, but all in all it was the most complete game for sure."

On stopping the run:

"Going into the game we knew they ran the ball really well. Their plus-one runs were a big deal for them with the quarterback. The quarterback is a great runner, a big, athletic kid. We didn't even think we outright yard for yard had to win the run-game battle, but we felt like it had to be close. They outrushed Alabama. They are a really good rushing team, and so we challenged our DBs. We went 1 for 1 on the perimeter. We didn't play with any help over the top. If they went four wides, we went four guys, go match them, and everybody else play the box. Our post safety was mirroring the quarterback. He wasn't thinking about playing the post. He was thinking about if the quarterback runs it, I'm going to show in the run game. Our guys executed. It was really exciting to see our front come alive. That's been lacking a little at times to start the year, and to see those guys turn it on and start to dial in and create some negative plays was fun to watch, and it was a collection of guys. It wasn't just one guy. Parker Peterson, Kam Hamilton looked really good. Fobbs-White early in the game looked good. Gerrod Henderson flashed some. Patrick Jenkins is coming on. I'm starting to feel him more. Up front is starting to hit their stride."

On Mensah:

"I say this all the time, it's like shooting the basketball. It's nice to see the ball go in the net. Make a couple of throws early and have some success. They were really playing aggressive to the box. They play a lot of man coverage. We were able to hit Mario on a couple of climb routes or over routes across the formation. We create some leverage where they are in trail position, but the kid's got really good poise and really good anticipation on the throws we're asking him to make. He's growing right in front of our eyes. My most exciting thing was watching him tuck the ball a couple of times and watching him go get the first down on a scramble. He's still got to put the ball away on one. We brought him over and were like, can you please put the ball away and protect the football? But he's getting better and better. He played really efficiently. Those numbers are pretty special for a youngster to go 18 of 22 for 326 yards and three touchdowns. That's a pretty good stat line for a first conference game."

On three different starters on D-line:

"The depth in that room is probably better than it's presented. Adin (Huntington) was a little limited through the week. I think he played seven snaps today maybe. I don't have the officlal count in front of me, but it was about seven plays. He practiced the back end of the week but was available. To me it's hard if you don't practice to play a guy a whole lot. And to be honest, Kam Hamilton has earned it. Kam has really played at a high level, practiced at a high level, brought it every day. if we can play eight or nine guys up front, that bodes well for the opportunity to keep guys fresh and then play with great effort."

David Harris speaks

I had a one-on-one with him this morning. I think chief operating officer Patrick Norton and Fitts had the primary call on the Pac-12 situation, but obviously Harris was intimately involved as well. Here's the transcript:

What were the overriding factors in Tulane deciding not to take the Pac-12 offer?

"For us, you look at several factors when you're considering an opportunity. Institutional alignment is certainly an important consideration. You look at the financial piece of it, whether that's distributions that are projected to come from the conference or exit fees that you have to pay to leave your current conference. You look at geography and what would it really take for all of your teams to be able to participate in the conference that you're looking at. Obviously in this case you're talking about the west coast. You're talking that there is fairly significant travel, especially for your sports that are not typically chartering the way that a football and a basketball would charter. Then you also look at overall stability of the league. Most of the time when you see these situations, it is an established league that is in existence right now and ultimately is looking to add members, so the overall stability is not really in question; they are just trying to figure out where they want to go with adding new members. But in this case, you've got to look at what are the future prospects of this league that's really just resurrecting and going forward whether or not you feel it is going to continue to be stable and grow and prosper over the next several years. And then you have to consider things like media contracts, which again when you're talking about a league that's just trying to get itself off the ground, the lack of having something like that is something you have to consider because you're dealing with information that often times is speculation. You don't have any guarantees about exactly what it's going to be."

It's been described as a catch-22 situation where the Pac-12 was promising revenue that could not be realized without the four AAC teams joining it with no media rights deal in place and the schools needing proof that the money would be there before joining the Pac-12. Do you agree with that?

"Right, it was all speculation from the very beginning, so you have to determine to what extent are you comfortable operating in that space, to what extent are you willing to make a move based on what they are projecting may happen, and as you said, based on certain institutions joining the conference. There was just a tremendous amount of uncertainty, so when you're in a situation where you feel like you're a member of a strong conference and you're heading in the right direction and you have great leadership and we've been able to be successful, you have to look in the mirror and say what it is about this situation that's based largely on speculation that you think is a better opportunity than the one that you're enjoying now."

There have been multiple reports the Pac-12 offered to cover only $2.5 million of the exit fees for the AAC teams. Can you verify that?

"I'm going to choose not to. As they were sharing information with us, they asked us to operate with some degree of confidentiality. I would just say we know there is a significant exit fee that would be involved for us if we were to decide to leave."

Would the exit fee have been close to the $25 million SMU paid?

"I don't know that we even had any conversations with the commissioner of OK, if we decide to do this, it's going to be $25 million like SMU's, is it going to be less, is it going to be more. If I'm sitting in Tim Pernetti's shoes, I'm certainly thinking about what do I need to do to protect the conference, so the degree to which you would be looking at something significantly less than that is certainly questionable. As I said, we never got to a point where we were having those conversations with the AAC, but I did keep $25 million in mind as being the fee that the last institution paid, so if we were looking to make a departure, figuring that it was going to be in that approximate range."

Multiple message board peeps of mine (OK, I didn't actually word it that way) have said ESPN has a look-in to its media rights package with the AAC in 2026 and can adjust the amount it is paying the league. Is that accurate?


"Yes, my understanding and the commissioner was talking to us and he'd be the best person to give you the details, but I believe that's coming up in 2026 where there is an opportunity to make those adjustments."

How comfortable do you feel with where the AAC is?

"Very comfortable. At a time when I had a chance to meet and talk with the commissioner, which has been quite a bit over the past couple of weeks. We were talking on a fairly regular basis, but then it really got accelerated about two weeks ago, so it feels like we've had conversations every day, and so even before now I've really been comfortable with his vision for the conference, with how aggressive he wants to be to try to pursue opportunities for revenue enhancement for the league. He wants to look under every rock. He wants to explore every situation. He's been really good and open and he has shared information and he has communicated on a regular basis. Many times an organization is going to rise and fall on its leadership, and I think with him we have a strong leader in that position. I felt very strong about the AAC coming into this (AD) position. It's one of the reasons that I felt comfortable making the move. Mike Aresco was still in the position, but as the transition has happened and Tim has gotten into the chair, it's just really strengthened my feelings about what our future can possibly be."

How important was it that nobody left the league?

"That was something we talked about as athletic directors and the presidents had a chance in our conversation as we all had an opportunity to be able to weigh what was being put on the table. We felt that because none of us were seriously looking to accept and pursue what was being put in front of us, it presented an opportunity for us to put forward a show of unity and strength that you don't typically see in college athletics anymore. It feels like most of the time, most institutions when they're in these situations, it's kind of every school for itself. I was really impressed that almost from the very beginning, my phone began to ring with calls from the other ADs in the league to talk about the opportunity and to get our feelings and to try to see if we were on different pages or the same page, and I was really tremendously impressed with the way we were all able to come together and talk and really come to the same conclusion after looking at the information, even to the point that as things really came to a head this past Monday, I know that many of us were all together physically in Washington D.C. at the time at the LEAD1, now FBS athletic diector association meetings, so we were able to literally be in front of each other and have conversations and meet in person and just make sure that we were all on the same page. I think for all of us it became important that if we were looking at considering anything, that doing something that would possibly involve the other schools was an important consideration from the very beginning of our conversations."

Upcoming: Engaging the Enemy with USF and an interview with David Harris

I am writing all my advance copy for The Advocate on the USF game right now, but later today i will post Engaging the Enemy on the front page with USF beat writer Joey Knight. I also had a one-on-one interview with Davis Harris this morning on the decision to reject the Pac-12 offer and the status of the bubble. I will transcribe those quotes here.
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