Quote board: Tulane 29, UTSA 16
- By Guerry Smith
- Joe Kennedy's Wave Crest
- 26 Replies
Using the same defensive game plan Shiel Wood had against UTSA when he coached at Troy last year, Tulane made quarterback Frank Harris look very average tonight, containing him on the ground and making him prove he could beat the Wave with his arm, which he could not do.
The offense consisted of Makhi Hughes, Chris Brazzell and nothing else, but it was good enough for Tulane to ride five turnovers to a comfortable 29-16 win against the mistake-prone Roadrunners, who were not up to the challenge of defeating a top-level AAC team after feating on the bottom half of the league in their first seven games.
SMU is next, and while Tulane will need more production in the passing game, it will have an advantage up front on both sides of the ball in my opinion, and that's where most games are won. Preston Stone will throw a lot better than Harris did, but I like Tulane's chances playing at home.
Willie Fritz, Makhi Hughes, Chris Brazzell and Tyler Grubbs spoke after the big win.
FRITZ
"Really proud of the guys. Just got done telling them we did an excellent job of complementary football. Great coverage with the kickoff team. They finally quit trying to take them out. I think we got them on 13- and the 15-yard line (actually the 14 on the first one) and made them go long fields. Defensively we bent a little bit but we didn't break. We made some big plays when we had to. The other big play in the kicking game obviously was the onside kick recovery (by Kam Pedescleaux) that iced the game. Offensively we weren't in synch all the time but made the plays when we needed to. I don't know what time of possession was, but I assume we had pretty good time of possession (Actually, UTSA had the ball for 31:42 to Tulane's 28:18). That's a really dangerous quarterback. He's a really good player. I think he's thrown for over 11,000 yards or something like that (11,660 entering this game). We did a nice job minimizing his effectiveness. He didn't rush for very many yards and for the most part we kept him in the pocket, so a really good job by the defense, offense and kicking game and we're on to next week, so we're very happy about it."
On Shiel Wood making Frank Harris look average twice in 12 months at two different schools:
"I talked to him about a couple of days ago. I didn't watch last year's game (between Troy and UTSA in the Cure Bowl). You get to this point in the season and you have 11 games to watch I said how similar are they to what they did last year in the bowl game against you, and he said exactly the same. We changed some stuff up, but we didn't change a whole lot. We ran a lot of the same concepts he did a year ago, and he did a great job of preparing our guys."
On Makhi Hughes season high:
"He's just a great back. He breaks a lot of tackles. Sometimes what isn't noticed is when he gets back to the line of scrimmage. They get some penetration and we don't get a hat on a hat and it could have been a loss of 3 and all of the sudden it's second-and-10. That's a big play. He also made a couple of tough 1- or 2-yard gains when there wasn't a whole lot blocked. Everybody always remembers the big ones, but he also does a good job of getting the tough yards and making it second-and-8 when he gets 4 or 5. Now you're in a situation where you probably can go for it twice, so an excellent job by Makhi."
On significance of back-to-back championship games:
"Well they are very excited about it. This is a goal of ours obviously when the season begins to be conference champs, and we're in a position to play next week for that opportunity. We've talked earlier in the year about goals we have and then we just throw it away and worry about the task at hand and go 1-0 each week. They've done a very good job of really focusing each week and not worrying about the end game. If we didn't have this outcome tonight, we wouldn't be playing next week. Great job by the guys. The moment wasn't too big for them. We just talked about keep playing. There was a series last week where FAU went 19 plays and got no points and the guys just kept fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting and finally finished it, and that's how you have to play the game. We did that in all three phases."
On keeping Harris from running:
"I don't know what we had yardage wise (13 carries for 28 yards; 10 carries for 51 yards factoring out sacks), but we did a nice job of hemming it up. He pulled it a couple of times and got a couple of big plays (longest gain: 10 yards), but when we collapsed the pocket, it made it tough on him. We had good, tight coverage downfield whether it was zone or man, and we did an excellent job of collapsing the pocket, and for the most part we did a good job of keeping him inside the pocket. The defensive line, and the linebackers when they were blitzing did an excellent job."
On answering failed fake punt by UTSA with successful one on next series:
"Really nice job by Chris Brazzell. They saw it. They subbed late, which was smart, and they saw that we had Kai (Horton) in there and Chris, but he did a really nice job of running a disciplined route, and the guy held the dog out of him and we ended up getting 3 points out of it."
On if Tulane embodies the Bill Parcells line about confidence being born out of demonstrated ability:
"We've got some clutch guys. There were a couple of times we needed plays by the offense, and they did it. The same thing with defense. That was a big stop down there at the end when they were inside the 20 and we got the stop, which was huge for us a couple of times."
On how that tips the balance:
"Well, I've heard coaches say it's a whole lot of nothing when they drive a long time and don't get any points out of it. It's big when you get a turnover on downs or you make them punt or you get a takeaway. I think we were plus-2 tonight on turnover/takeaway (actually plus-4). In my career as a coach I think I've won like 92 percent of my games when we were plus-1 or better. In that situation you've got a very good chance of winning."
On field goal at end of first half instead of running play on third-and-1 from 5 with 10 seconds left:
"We had a problem with that a couple of weeks ago (at ECU when the clock ran out after Pratt extended a play before Jha'Quan Jackson dropped a pass; a replay review restored a second) and I just wanted to take 3. We went a little long and threw it and got lucky and fortunate, so I just said hey, let's go ahead and let that be the last play of the half and get a field goal out of it and go on in. I didn't want to be too cute."
On if ever talk about going for repeat championship and making history:
"Sometimes we do talk about that. I make little jokes about it. Last year I talked about how USC was trying to get revenge against us for the '39 Rose Bowl. It's a very significant accomplishment by us, but we've got to win next week."
"
The offense consisted of Makhi Hughes, Chris Brazzell and nothing else, but it was good enough for Tulane to ride five turnovers to a comfortable 29-16 win against the mistake-prone Roadrunners, who were not up to the challenge of defeating a top-level AAC team after feating on the bottom half of the league in their first seven games.
SMU is next, and while Tulane will need more production in the passing game, it will have an advantage up front on both sides of the ball in my opinion, and that's where most games are won. Preston Stone will throw a lot better than Harris did, but I like Tulane's chances playing at home.
Willie Fritz, Makhi Hughes, Chris Brazzell and Tyler Grubbs spoke after the big win.
FRITZ
"Really proud of the guys. Just got done telling them we did an excellent job of complementary football. Great coverage with the kickoff team. They finally quit trying to take them out. I think we got them on 13- and the 15-yard line (actually the 14 on the first one) and made them go long fields. Defensively we bent a little bit but we didn't break. We made some big plays when we had to. The other big play in the kicking game obviously was the onside kick recovery (by Kam Pedescleaux) that iced the game. Offensively we weren't in synch all the time but made the plays when we needed to. I don't know what time of possession was, but I assume we had pretty good time of possession (Actually, UTSA had the ball for 31:42 to Tulane's 28:18). That's a really dangerous quarterback. He's a really good player. I think he's thrown for over 11,000 yards or something like that (11,660 entering this game). We did a nice job minimizing his effectiveness. He didn't rush for very many yards and for the most part we kept him in the pocket, so a really good job by the defense, offense and kicking game and we're on to next week, so we're very happy about it."
On Shiel Wood making Frank Harris look average twice in 12 months at two different schools:
"I talked to him about a couple of days ago. I didn't watch last year's game (between Troy and UTSA in the Cure Bowl). You get to this point in the season and you have 11 games to watch I said how similar are they to what they did last year in the bowl game against you, and he said exactly the same. We changed some stuff up, but we didn't change a whole lot. We ran a lot of the same concepts he did a year ago, and he did a great job of preparing our guys."
On Makhi Hughes season high:
"He's just a great back. He breaks a lot of tackles. Sometimes what isn't noticed is when he gets back to the line of scrimmage. They get some penetration and we don't get a hat on a hat and it could have been a loss of 3 and all of the sudden it's second-and-10. That's a big play. He also made a couple of tough 1- or 2-yard gains when there wasn't a whole lot blocked. Everybody always remembers the big ones, but he also does a good job of getting the tough yards and making it second-and-8 when he gets 4 or 5. Now you're in a situation where you probably can go for it twice, so an excellent job by Makhi."
On significance of back-to-back championship games:
"Well they are very excited about it. This is a goal of ours obviously when the season begins to be conference champs, and we're in a position to play next week for that opportunity. We've talked earlier in the year about goals we have and then we just throw it away and worry about the task at hand and go 1-0 each week. They've done a very good job of really focusing each week and not worrying about the end game. If we didn't have this outcome tonight, we wouldn't be playing next week. Great job by the guys. The moment wasn't too big for them. We just talked about keep playing. There was a series last week where FAU went 19 plays and got no points and the guys just kept fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting and finally finished it, and that's how you have to play the game. We did that in all three phases."
On keeping Harris from running:
"I don't know what we had yardage wise (13 carries for 28 yards; 10 carries for 51 yards factoring out sacks), but we did a nice job of hemming it up. He pulled it a couple of times and got a couple of big plays (longest gain: 10 yards), but when we collapsed the pocket, it made it tough on him. We had good, tight coverage downfield whether it was zone or man, and we did an excellent job of collapsing the pocket, and for the most part we did a good job of keeping him inside the pocket. The defensive line, and the linebackers when they were blitzing did an excellent job."
On answering failed fake punt by UTSA with successful one on next series:
"Really nice job by Chris Brazzell. They saw it. They subbed late, which was smart, and they saw that we had Kai (Horton) in there and Chris, but he did a really nice job of running a disciplined route, and the guy held the dog out of him and we ended up getting 3 points out of it."
On if Tulane embodies the Bill Parcells line about confidence being born out of demonstrated ability:
"We've got some clutch guys. There were a couple of times we needed plays by the offense, and they did it. The same thing with defense. That was a big stop down there at the end when they were inside the 20 and we got the stop, which was huge for us a couple of times."
On how that tips the balance:
"Well, I've heard coaches say it's a whole lot of nothing when they drive a long time and don't get any points out of it. It's big when you get a turnover on downs or you make them punt or you get a takeaway. I think we were plus-2 tonight on turnover/takeaway (actually plus-4). In my career as a coach I think I've won like 92 percent of my games when we were plus-1 or better. In that situation you've got a very good chance of winning."
On field goal at end of first half instead of running play on third-and-1 from 5 with 10 seconds left:
"We had a problem with that a couple of weeks ago (at ECU when the clock ran out after Pratt extended a play before Jha'Quan Jackson dropped a pass; a replay review restored a second) and I just wanted to take 3. We went a little long and threw it and got lucky and fortunate, so I just said hey, let's go ahead and let that be the last play of the half and get a field goal out of it and go on in. I didn't want to be too cute."
On if ever talk about going for repeat championship and making history:
"Sometimes we do talk about that. I make little jokes about it. Last year I talked about how USC was trying to get revenge against us for the '39 Rose Bowl. It's a very significant accomplishment by us, but we've got to win next week."
"