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Moving in the right direction?!?!

The one thing I've noticed since head coach WF has been here is that we rarely get "blown out" like in years past. My definition of a "blow out" is 2 scores or more (14 or more points). While we all would like to win more and go bowling - we've come so close the last 2 years (2017 - Navy, FIU, USF, Cincy, SMU; 2018 - WF, UAB, SMU). That got me wondering - how many times have we been blown out since WF was hired as compared to the years before that (I went back to 2010). Question: Are we moving in the right direction?

What I found was somewhat surprising but then again, not all THAT surprising but I'll share it here with you now.

Tulane has lost by 14 or more 6 times since WF was hired in 2016.

2018 - 1

Ohio State

2017 - 2

Oklahoma
Memphis

2016 - 3

Tulsa
UCF
Temple

For comparison, Tulane lost by 14 or more 6 times in BOTH 2015 and 2014. Since 2010 the only year with less that 6 blowout losses before WF was hired was in 2013 (2 times) when we went bowling. Here are the totals before WF was hired. Its amazing how may times in a season we had to watch such lopsided blowouts.

2015 - 6

Duke
Georgia Tech
Temple
Houston
Navy
SMU

2014 - 6

Georgia Tech
Duke
Rutgers
Cincinnati
Memphis
ECU

2013 - 2

Syracuse
FAU

2012 - 6

Tulsa
Ole Miss
UL Monroe
UL Lafayette
Memphis
Houston

2011 - 9

Tulsa
Duke
Army
UTEP
Memphis
ECU
SMU
Houston
Hawaii

2010 - 8

Ole Miss
Houston
Army
Tulsa
SMU
Southern Miss
UCF
Marshall

So, what are your thoughts? Comments? Do you think we are moving in the right direction?

Practice update: Tuesday, Nov. 6

I almost missed practice entirely today because it ended early, just after 10 a.m., but Cam Sample did not go today. I have a feeling he will be a game time decision against ECU, but we'll have to wait and see.

Jonathan Banks did not practice, either. He was available on an emergency basis only against USF, with Dane Ledford going in for the one play Justin McMillan missed, and it is not clear if Banks will be any better this week. It definitely is an injury that has held him out, but Tulane is not releasing the specifics to keep opponents from knowing what the deal is if he has to play.

Tulane coaches and players say their entire focus is on ECU, as it should be. Since I'm not part of the team and can look ahead to my heart's delight, let's go over the AAC bowl picture. The league's bowl tie-ins are a heap of steaming crap, but going to the postseason is better than the alternative. The full list:

Cure Bowl (Orlando) on Dec. 15 vs. Sun Belt
--Comment: good city, lousy opponent

Boca Raton Bowl on Dec. 18 vs. CUSA
--Comment: crappy stadium, crappy opponent

Frisco Bowl (Texas) on Dec. 19 vs. at-large
--Comment: the last three years the opponent has been CUSA, MAC and CUSA

Gasparilla Bowl (Tampa) on Dec. 20 vs. CUSA
--Comment: good city, crappy opponent

Birmingham Bowl on Dec. 22 vs. SEC
--Comment: think Tennessee-Vanderbilt winner or maybe South Carolina

Armed Forces Bowl (Fort Worth) on Dec. 22 vs Big 12
--Comment: most likely Baylor or TCU

Military Bowl (Annapolis) on Dec. 31 vs. ACC
--Comment: could be anyone in a jumbled mess of mediocrity that could produce 12 bowl teams

The AAC also has secondary tie-ins with the Liberty and Independence bowls if other conferences cannot produce enough bowl eligible teams. The AAC likely will have eight bowl eligible teams, fulfilling all of its obligations if UCF makes one of the big six bowls. If UCF does not, the AAC will be one over its allotment. I project 81 teams nationally to be bowl eligible for 78 spots, but none of the three teams that stay home would be from the AAC.

LOOKING AT THE OPPONENT

I'm not going to play alarmist and act like a team that is 3-18 in conference play under coach Scottie Montgomery is very dangerous, but ECU does present some problems. The Pirates have rolled up 27, 29 and 29 first downs in their last three games. Only two teams--Ohio State and Texas Tech--have averaged more first downs for the season than ECU has in its last three games against Houston, UCF and Memphis.

Wide receiver Trevon Brown, a first-team All-AAC preseason pick, has caught 33 passes for 491 yards and four TDs in that three-game span.

True freshman quarterback Holton Ahlers, a 3-star recruit, has started the last two games and put up prolific numbers without being efficient--he needed 115 throws and 63 completions to net 855 passing yards. Tulane needs to be better against him than in the opener against Wake Forest's true freshman QB, who picked apart a soft defense that did not vary its looks. Ahlers also leads the Pirates in rushing (374 yards) despite starting only twice, so the defense will have to close up the open lanes on its pass rush. Ahlers is no sitting duck.

ECU defensive end Nate Harvey, who walked on as a junior college transfer running back and was awarded a scholarship this August before his senior season, leads the nation with 20 tackles for loss and is second nationally with 9 1/2 sacks. He's an incredible story, so Tulane's vastly improved tackle play will be tested.

Maybe Tulane will run for more than 300 yards again, but I have a feeling the Wave will need more from the passing game and Justin McMillan. East Carolina has watched the video and will totally sell out to stop the run. That means Terren Encalade and Darnell Mooney need to catch everything they can grab against a weak secondary. Mooney is due for a good game after three light weeks (five catches, 68 yards) in a row. He led all AAC receivers before that stretch. Now he is eighth, and he clearly does not have the same chemistry with McMillan as he had with Banks. Another week of practice should help there.

Keeping Fritz at Tulane

i have a simple question...

Assuming we beat ECU and Navy, (and possibly Houston), are we prepared to do what it takes to keep Willie Fritz at Tulane?

We all know the vultures will be circling to scoop up our head coach. I hope and trust Dannen already has a plan in motion to keep him here.

Three or four more years with coach Fritz will put Tulane football on solid ground, get butts in the stands, and make it a profitable program.

Most of all I hope the Tulane administration finally sees Tulane Football as an investment not an expense.

I think Fitts gets it. I hope the rest of them do and support Dannens efforts in keeping a great coach at Tulane.

Does anyone have any knowledge of this...not an opinion but real knowledge?

Questions for Coach Fritz...

Good afternoon Guerry, if possible could you ask CWF a couple of questions during the next media availability?

With the season winding down to 3 games plus a possible bowl game, are there any plans to use some of the youngsters that you all planned on redshirting? For instance Cam Carrol, Jemarian James, Dorian Camel or Ygenio Booker?

Tulane has not had a lot of success on the field lately...How do you guard against complacency and thinking "we've arrived" versus an ECU team which has not had a lot of success this season?

Thanks Guerry!

Korey King

Guerry- Korey King "committed" on twitter yesterday but none of the coaches have acknowledged his commitment (via a like or a re-tweet). His game is similar to Dante Wright and Kiland Harrison, so I wouldn't be shocked if we didn't agree to take his commitment. Do you know what his status is?

Also- any other recruits close to committing?

View from South Florida: this is what still happens when teams lose to Tulane

The task for Willie Fritz is to get Tulane to the point where hometown columnists don't feel compelled to write takedowns of the team they cover after a loss to the Wave.

This one was from Martin Fennelly of the Tampa Bay Times yesterday. I know Martin. He's a good writer. But it shows the perception of Tulane that exists currently.

https://www.tampabay.com/sports/usf-bulls/2018/11/03/fennelly-usf-just-quit-on-the-season/

Corey Dauphine

Corey Dauphine talked today. He is a unique talent and a unique individual. I'm not sure I've ever covered a running back with his personality. He's very nice but very high strung, and it feels like the staff has performed a balancing act trying to figure out what makes him tick.

Obviously, he was underused badly at times this year. His numbers in the three wins are 36 carries for 346 yards and five touchdowns. HIs numbers in the five losses are 28 carries for 175 yards and zero touchdowns. But he bears a little responsibility because his attention to detail is not always great. Regardless, I don't think the coaches will keep him on the sideline again like they did against SMU. His incredible breakaway threat trumps his weaknesses, and he can use power when he needs to as well.

This was an interesting interview.

You had 18 carries. How much fun was that?

"It was really fun. The whole week the coaching staff was like just be ready. They were making sure I was ready every day and making sure I was up to it. I knew they were going to give me the ball more because they told me they were going to give me the ball more. The SMU game they felt like they should have gave me the ball more, and so this game they kept prepping me. I was just ready for it."

Coach Fritz told us your three carries against SMU simply weren't enough. What did they tell you?

"Just after the game coach Fritz came up to me personally. He was like, I should have gave you the ball more, but we want to make sure next week you get the ball. Just be ready for it and just be locked in. It was immediately. We were still on the field. We were done with the little school song thing, and then he just came up next me and he was like, hey, I'm going to give you the ball more next week. You should have gotten the ball more in this game."

What was your feeling during the SMU game?

"I didn't really actually have a feeling. I was more mad that we lost the game. I was more focused on that. I really wasn't tripping on not getting the ball. I don't even know how to answer that."

So what was your feeling when he told you you should have gotten the ball more?

"That made me feel like he knew that we needed a change and we needed to give me the ball more. I felt like they see something in me, and I was ready for it."

What do you bring to the backfield in relation to the other running backs?

"I just feel like I do everything fast. I guess they like it. That's just me. I do everything fast."

The three games Tulane has won have been your biggest games. How much do you feel like you help this team?

"I feel like I can help the team a lot. I want to win games. That's the big thing for me, and whatever I can do to help my team out, I'll do it."

What's been the hardest thing for you this year?

"Not really. It's more believing what I can do and just putting me in and knowing that I can do that job."

You have seven runs of 35 yards or more this year. What makes you so explosive?

"Just my speed. Track. If I see a crease, I want to hit it full speed and give it my all and get a touchdown and help the team out however."

They've given you a lot of carries up the middle. Do you feel you can be effective there, too?

"Oh, definitely, definitely. They got the ball in the middle pretty much last week and I guess they felt like I was doing the right reads and I was doing everything right."

On the winning touchdown, Justin McMillan faked to you and everyone bit for it.

"Yeah, all 11 guys came up to me. I did a pretty good fake. That felt great because the whole drive they left me in. I was really waiting for them to take me out, but they didn't. They left me in and I was just going with it. I was just trying to make sure I did my job and just tried to score. That was it. That was on my mind, just scoring, scoring, just winning the game."

Do you feel like you are capable of handling that type of workload every week?

"Oh, definitely, definitely, definitely. I feel like I can go a little bit more. I definitely felt sore after the game, but it was a good sore. I like feeling sore because that means I did something."

Fire Willie Fritz

Fire Willie Fritz. Never have I heard a more idiotic, thoughtless demand from people who really need to look at their old posts.

In the history of this football program we’ve never hired more of a sure thing than Willie Fritz. Look at his resume and find a flaw, you won’t. You’re now seeing what we can be with halfway decent QB play. If McMillan can begin to throw the ball consistently then look out.

We still aren’t on par with our peer schools in terms of overall talent and depth but our coaches are better than the rest, and now you’re seeing it.

For all of the reactionary people who wanted to fire Fritz, please enjoy the rest of the schedule and the upcoming years. God forbid we ever get what you’ve been asking for.

PS - Banks should never play for Tulane again. I was 100% right about him
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Thoughts on Tulane's destruction of USF

South Florida probably is not very good. The Bulls probably are not going to win another game in the regular season with trips to Cincinnati and Temple and a home game against UCF remaining.

But Tulane's defense is salty and legit and I've felt like that for a while.

Darius Bradwell and Corey Dauphine are a heck of a 1-2 punch at running back.

Those two things seem clear, and Tulane is definitely capable of running the table in the regular season without any improvement elsewhere. Nothing is certain of course, but this team has found its winning formula, and the potential is even higher if Justin McMillan throws more accurately than he has in his last two starts.

First, the defense.

In past years. the loss of a guy as talented as Cam Sample on the opening series would have been devastating. Today, Tulane shook it off like nothing had happened because this team is deep up front.

Patrick Johnson is a first-team All-AAC caliber performer. Robert Kennedy is a playmaker, and I think he will be fine after getting hurt in the second half. Jeffery Johnson is going to be a superstar and is good right now. DeAndre Williams is solid. Carlos Hatcher is playing well. Davon Wright is serviceable. I can't remember a Tulane defensive front with this type of depth.

The three-man linebacker crew (only two are on the field at a time) of Zach Harris, Marvin Moody and Lawrence Graham is good. I have not watched the game again yet, but Moody appeared to have his best game. Harris had a quick reaction on the deflected interception that all too often would have gone off the hands of past linebackers.

Cornerback Jaylon Monroe was outstanding for the second consecutive game. Donnie Lewis is playing at an All-AAC level. Rod Teamer is smart and a good hitter

The nickelbacks are making plays, too, with both Will Harper and Tirise Barge contributing today. Barge got his helmet right on the ball for that wild cause fumble that P.J. Hall returned.

The defense is not perfect by any means, but it is getting better and better, as coaches love to say, and is good enough to contain Houston QB D'Eriq King and give Tulane a chance to win in Houston Thursday after next.

Second, the running backs.

I don't know why Corey Dauphine played sparingly for a few weeks, but it won't happen again. His long run in the first half was outstanding because another back might have been stopped for a loss, but he read it perfectly, saw the hole and sprinted through it. He's special, and I know I'm not writing anything you don't already know about him.

Darius Bradwell is a horse. Tulane put out the stat that he had more runs of 20 or more yards than all but two other players this year before the game, and he added to his total today. HIs long touchdown was easy, but he keeps pounding at opponents and wearing them down.

With those two ingredients--the defense and the running backs--Tulane should get to a bowl game, but I believe it can win the West with good play at two other positions.

One is the offensive line, which has improved dramatically with a healthy Noah Fisher and Joey Claybrook at tackle. Given the history of the last seven years, I cannot confidently predict the line will play well the rest of the way, but I believe it is possible with the five guys out there right now.

Two is McMillan, who already has improved the offense with his decision-making and lack of mistakes. He coughed it up once today, but it was not a result of holding the ball loosely or simply being careless. The next step for him is to stop being jittery on his throws. Some of his passes in the first half were downright awful. He has excellent pocket sense and almost always avoids the first pass rusher, but he needs to put the ball on the money more often, like he did on his deep ball to Darnell Mooney.

If McMillan develops a good rapport with Mooney and Terren Encalade and delivers the ball to them, I really believe my prediction of seven wins before the season can come true.

ECU is not an automatic win on Saturday because it has a good pass rush, is OK against the run and can hurt team in the air, matching up better with Tulane than Tulsa did. But the Pirates do not know how to win, unlike SMU., so Tulane should get the job done there.

Navy is an automatic win. The Midshipmen have fallen apart offensively and will not be able to run on Tulane.

A 7-5 season probably will come down to beating Houston. Two weeks, who would have thought that possible? How could anyone have thought that possible?
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Film study: Tulane vs. Tulsa

Here are several observations after watching every play again:

1) Some things that have already been pointed out are how well Joey Claybrook played in his first extensive action, and the film study bore that out. He entered on Tulane's fourth series and never left, providing some key blocks on some of the most important plays, including a run by Bradwell on the first touchdown drive, a fantastic block on Amare Jones' long burst and the springing block on Justin McMillan's winning TD run.

Noah Fisher also had a strong game. He looked like Tulane's best offensive lineman in preseason camp until he sprained his ankle. I particularly liked his simple block on Corey Dauphine's long run. He simply punched his man out of the way with one powerful blow, something you rarely see from Tulane's offensive linemen. He made a good block on Bradwell's short TD run for the first score and another good block on a McMillan scramble. This was Tulane's best tackle combination in a few years, so it will be interesting to see if they can duplicate that performance against South Florida's shaky defense.

2) I charted all of Tulsa's passes to see who the intended target was and came up with this:

Jaylon Monroe, 8 targets, 2 completions (one long, one insignificant)
Donnie Lewis, 6 targets, 3 completions (all short)
Ant
Willie Langham, 2 targets, 0 completions (one was dropped in the end zone)

Monroe had an outstanding game. I saw no play where there was even the possibility a flag could have flown, but I guess somebody might be referring to the one in the back of the end zone. What was the other one? Tulsa went after him repeatedly. He got burned only once while making a terrific play on a second-half deep ball down the sideline.

Rod Teamer was targeted five times, but the safeties aren't really in single coverage. He should have made a play on the touchdown pass in the first half but did not get there in time. P.J. Hall was targeted twice, giving up completions both times, including a big one when he was trailing badly. Taris Shenall and Will Harper were targeted once.

3) I'm not a fan of the blitzes because they rarely get home and leave the secondary vulnerable to big plays. Once, Teamer lined up 8 yards deep, blitzed and was knocked off his feet by a running back, freeing Seth Boomer up for a big scramble right up the vacated middle. Tulane is getting enough pressure with its front four that any blitz by a safety or corner tends to be counterproductive in my view.

4) McMillan showed outstanding pocket presence. It helped that Tulsa has a pitiful pass rush, but he kept plays alive with his feet and never panicked, unlike Jonathan Banks, who has some of the worst pocket presence I've ever seen. Even when Banks made big plays, which he was very capable of doing, he looked off balance and had zero ball awareness. McMillan had a beautiful completion to Terren Encalade when he scrambled to his left and threw across his body to Encalade. It was not a dangerous play because Encalade had plenty of separation. He also made a nice pass to Jabril Clewis on Tulane's opening possession and showed good patience in the pocket before hitting Amare Jones for a first down on third-and-7.

That said, McMillan was very poor overall with his accuracy. The passes he would love to have back: a throw behind Encalade early, a pass too high for Encalade, the lucky tipped third-down pass that
Encalade caught for a first down on the first touchdown drive which should have been intercepted (OK, I guess he would not like to have that one back because it led to a much needed TD), a deep ball for Encalade into triple coverage that was not close to being completed, the terrible pass to an open Mooney on third-and-goal in the end zone before the tying field goal and a pass too high and too hard for Mooney on fourth down midway through the fourth quarter. McMillan is capable of throwing much better than he did and will need to be more accurate today.

5) The misdirection option pitch to Jorrien Vallien came out of nowhere and worked perfectly. That one definitely needs to be used again whether it's Vallien or someone else.

6) Zach Harris ran out of position twice on big Tulsa gains. Otherwise, he was solid, but middle linebackers need to stay in their gaps.

7) The defense was aggressive and hit hard from start to finish, something we've rarely seen from Tulane on the road. Teamer set the tone early with a big hit, and Tirise Barge had a huge one on a run blitz. Tulane did not miss many tackles, limiting the big plays that have hurt it so much this year.

8) It may be time to file the wildcat with Amare Jones. He missed a snap on one and had the bad exchange with Bradwell that led to a lost fumble. I don't see enough upside on those plays to warrant their use, but maybe I'll be proved wrong.

9) Twice, Corey Dauphine moved the pile significantly after being hit. His first couple of runs were nothing plays, but when they kept feeding him the ball, he excelled.

10) Zach Block is a weapon on kickoffs. He had three touchbacks in five attempts, and the two that weren't were a squib kick that went out of bounds and a kick from the 20 after a penalty that would have gone 3 yards deep in the end zone if he had kicked off from the 35. His other kicks landed 4 yards in the end zone, 5 yards in the end zone and at the 1 before bouncing into the end zone.

11) If Tulane plays well today, a big if on the road, it can win. The people I know who cover South Florida say the defense has been as bad as its number suggest and is very vulnerable. But they expect Tulane to have a very hard time slowing down the Bulls' offense, so Cam Sample, Patrick Johnson and company need to have a dominant day, and the linebackers need to make plays. South Florida will be ready after getting housed by Houston (for the most part), and Tulane has to match that intensity from the start.

Practice update: Wednesday, Oct. 31

Coming off its best offensive line performance of the year, Tulane has made a significant change in the lineup for the South Florida game.

Right tackle Joey Claybrook, a redshirt freshman from Starkville, Miss., will make his first career start after having a terrific second half against Tulsa. Both of the starting tackle spots have changed hands in the last week or so, with Noah Fisher reclaiming his left tackle spot from Tyler Johnson for the Tulsa game and Claybrook supplanting Keyshawn McLeod this week.

"For his (Claybrook's) first extensive action, he did an excellent job," Willie Fritz said. "I'm impressed with him. We ran a counter one time and he was the second puller and he did that as well as we've had any tackle do here. A couple of times he down blocked and knocked guys five yards. He's a really smart player, and it's important to him. He's just kind of waited for his turn, and he got his chance and took advantage of it."

McLeod, a redshirt junior, started the first eight games after starting three times a year ago, but the offensive line struggled in run and pass blocking the previous two weeks before having an excellent game against Tulsa, paving the way for 300-plus rushing yards and allowing zero sacks. The Golden Hurricane has no pass rush to speak off, having registered seven sacks all year, but it still was a step forward for the Wave, which will try to duplicate that effort against South Florida this Saturday.

One player who expects to perform better this week is quarterback Justin McMillan, who made the AAC honor role after the Tulsa game despite struggling as a passer in his first career start. He needs to throw with less velocity and more accuracy, but he did everything else well against the Golden Hurricane, rushing for two touchdowns including the game-winning 39-yard score and committing zero turnovers.

"This start right now is going to be very important to me because it can show how I can make corrections on the mistakes I made from the first one," McMillan said. "In my mind I feel like if I make the same mistakes that I'm not getting better on my end and doing my job, so the big thing I'm focused on right now is learning from the mistakes I had in the first start and seeing how we can get better each week. We're on the cusp of being a really good offense."

McMillan should be calmer.

"You hope his second start is going to be better because he got all the butterflies out," Fritz said. "He did a really nice job of managing the game, which is the important part of being a quarterback, and then he's got a lot of arm talent and runs the ball probably better than we anticipated. He did a very nice job. The big thing for him right now is make the plays that are there, just don't force anything, and he's good about that. He stayed away from a bunch of sacks on Saturday and made the easy throws when they were there."

He also missed some makable throws, including a terrible pass to an open Darnell Mooney on third-and-goal in the fourth quarter that forced Tulane to settle for a tying field goal, but he did not let those mistakes get to him.

"That was really important," Fritz said. "There were a few throws he can make, but he also took some simple throws and I was impressed with that, too. Sometimes quarterbacks are always trying to hit the home run, and you have to know the situation in the game and move the sticks."

McMillan appears to be the only viable option. Jonathan Banks, who did not throw last week during practice and was unavailable to play against Tulsa according to Fritz's post-game comments, was not there today. Dane Ledford took the second-team reps.

Practice ended with sports information director Tom Symonds showing up in a penguin suit for Halloween. He went out to make interview requests from Fritz with a red bowtie, a yellow beak and the full costume. I'm not sure how that went over, but we got to talk to McMillan for (I believe) the first time since his first practice and to Corey Dauphine, too, so I'm all for the Halloween costume.

I will have the transcript of Dauphine either later today or tomorrow morning.

In other practice news, it appears that Jaylon Monroe will start at cornerback for the first time since the opener against Wake Forest. He had a very good game against Tulsa after Thakarius Keyes left with an injury and practiced ahead of Keyes today.

If Tulane blocks a punt against South Florida, look for it to be either Larry Bryant or Donnie Lewis. Those two clearly have the want to in that drill and are standouts in that department.

The defense had a breakdown against the scout team offense when it did not know what coverage it was in. Sorrell Brown caught an easy long pass from Keon Howard, beating P.J. Hall for a touchdown.

Tight end Kendall Ardoin returned in a no-contact jersey today.

Thursday update: Nov. 1

Tulane practiced at the Saints facility again this morning due to the bad weather in New Orleans. It is unclear whether Jonathan Banks (unspecified injury) will be available against South Florida, but Willie Fritz said Dane Ledford would be the No. 2 QB either way on Saturday.

Other than that, not much to report. I made it out there just as practice was finishing. Fritz was just happy to get a normal practice in. They had to move everything up a bit, with position meetings at 6:15 a.m, but that certainly beats practicing in the rain or waiting out lightning that ends up interfering with classes.

"The Saints are awesome," Fritz said. "Jay Romig is awesome. I appreciate them letting us come out here. As long as it doesn't conflict with them (they are OK with Tulane practicing there). They want us out of here about 10."

Ryan Wright

I also talked to Ryan Wright for the first time since I interviewed him on the phone right after he committed to Tulane last year. He is 10th nationally with an average of 45.4 yards since supplanting senior Zach Block. Of course, Block still attempts the pooch kicks, which helps Wright's average.

HIs average will be the third highest in school history if it holds up and he punts 13 more times to meet the minimum requirement of 35, ranking behind Brad Hill's 46.2 in 1997 and Ross Thevenot's 45.8 in 2008.

Here's what he had to say:

How has your confidence grown this year?

"The first game was a little tough. I think that was just nerves of starting for the first time, especially at Ohio State, but now I feel comfortable. I've got my op team a little faster now, so I feel really comfortable out there. I'm just trying to do my job so we can get good field position for the defense."

How good do you feel you are punting?

"I don't like talking about my rankings too much, but right now I'm number 10 in the country I believe. We'll see how that goes. That can change with one punt."

What was hardest adjustment from high school to college?

"It's not really any different. It's just a lot faster pace, but I got that down in the summer."

When did you start to feel more comfortable?

"I believe the first time I felt comfortable punting in a college game was against Memphis. My first punt was I believe over 50 yards and I just felt really comfortable after that."

The long return you gave up against Tulsa came after a punt that went right down the middle. Was that not where it was supposed to go?

"No. It was supposed to get to the numbers. It just dropped inside, so in my leg cross this week at practice I've been really focusing on just staying straight and getting the ball outside the numbers."

Why don't you like talking about rankings?

"I believe success is more a thing that comes after the season more than midseason. We still have four games left, and like I said, rankings can always change every punt. Some guys can do really good and some guys can do really bad. It just depends."

You don't look like the typical punter because you're so big (6-3, 245). How much does that help you?

"It doesn't affect. My size comes from playing quarterback in high school. I've just always been a big dude I guess."

How did you get into punting?

"I played soccer up until 10 years old. I've always punted for my team, had a strong leg. I didn't really start punting for Kohl's Kicking until my sophomore years, and they really got me to where I needed to be."

So you played QB all through high school? How many fake punts did you have?

"No, I'm surprised we never ran one."

Jack Curtis Q&A

On a long, productive day of interviews, we talked to Jack Curtis briefly after McMillan, Dauphine and Wright and before Fritz.

What has Patrick Johnson done to improve so much this year?


"When we recruited him last year, we didn't really know what position he was going to play. He was an athlete who could play tight end for us or defensive end, but when he got here, he was really forced due to a lack of depth to play an inside, interior line position, a four technique. It's really a big man's game in there and he was 240 or 250, that range, but he was tough. I think that year of him being in the trenches in a lot of ways was good for him because he learned how to play really tough, play with hands defeating blocks. And then when we moved him to outside linebacker, we still keep him in to rush a bunch, but he's really 250, 255 now and is really a physical player out there. That experience he got of being inside was really good. Being with coach Peoples, him training him how to use his hands and play blocks inside really helped him on the outside."

He talked about learning the technique a little better.

"The funny thing is that in that position, how young we are, he's the most experienced guy we have, and he has a spring and a fall under his belt and not completely a fall under his belt, so he's really still learning the position himself. And then we've got two true freshmen playing behind him getting some reps in there, and so he's the guy they're looking up to and he's developing his game still. The one thing that makes Pat able to make a lot of plays--he's got a lot of talent but he plays extremely hard and is really a tough kid who plays physical."

What is your assessment of South Florida's offense?

"Last year they were very explosive. They don't have quite the explosiveness with the quarterback (Quinton Flowers) in the run game like they had last year. A lot of times we had plays on but we just couldn't tackle him. They throw the ball better than they did, and they have a lot of the same receivers and the same running backs, so they are still extremely talented and explosive. They do it a little bit different way. They don't use it as much with the quarterback's feet. He hurt a few teams with it, but he's hurting them more with his arm and running the offense, and they have some really tall, big receivers out there."

Your defense is third in the AAC in fewest yards allowed during league games. How close are they to being where you want them to be?

"Well, two more spots closer. To get to No. 1 is where we want to be, and I'm going to give credit where credit's due. Last week we played pretty well on defense, but we were out there very few snaps. We played a total of 62 snaps. Our offense kept the ball, and that's the best defense you can be in. It's hard to win, especially in the American Conference, playing these types of teams and playing 90 snaps. That's too many opportunities for them. We cut it a third (against Tulsa). You play that few snaps, you've got a chance to win the game."

How fast paces is South Florida's no huddle?

"They are a little bit faster. We study this stuff and have some analytics on it. They are a little bit faster than what Tulsa was, so at times they can go extremely fast. They don't do it all the time, but they are going to do it on first down and on short-yardage situations. It depends on how the game is going. If you're playing well and stopping them on defense, they don't go as fast, but when they start rolling, it's breakneck speed."

But it's not Wake Forest fast?

"No, maybe not quite that fast. I haven't seen where Wake Forest is now, but that was tough, especially in the first game of the year. We're seeing these games and are adjusting to it. We've done things in our scheme to help us line up quicker and with our calls and all those things, so we're hoping that shows up on Saturday."

Mike Dunleavy quotes

Tulane plays Loyola in an exhibition game tomorrow. I caught up with Mike Dunleavy yesterday for an update on preseason practice (some of the questions were from Nola.com). Ray Ona did not practice. Jordan Cornish had a big ice bag on right knee but looked OK.

How have the last two weeks of practice gone?

"For the most part good. We have a situation right now where we have a lot of guys banged up. We had a scrimmage the other day and virtually had no point guards. Of course Ray (Ona Embo) has been on the shelf (with patellar tendinitis). He's getting closer, but he's not there yet. Shak (Shakwon Barrett) rolled an ankle. Jordan Cornish rolled an ankle. Caleb Daniels rolled an ankle. He actually bounced back and was able to play some, so we've got some guys who are playing a little bit gingerly right now and trying to get through that, but overall I have been pretty pleased with our development and some of the progress I've seen by some of our younger guys."

You said at Media Day that the scrimmages between the older guys and the younger guys were closer than they had been in the past.

"We have probably the deepest team that I've had in three years, so there's an opportunity to play 10 guys. Guys need to play with a lot of energy and they need to produce. In the past I've had to live with a lot more mistakes out on the court because I really wasn't confident of my ability to come in behind it and really do better. So for right now, the way we look at our group is I've got 10 guys that can go out there and play, and when you get your chance to get in the game and play with effort and produce, you are going to stay out there. If you make a mistake, then we'll rotate you out and give the next guy a chance. That's really a fair way to play it. It's good when you have it that way because it's competitive, and you get your young guys to learn quicker and get better."

Will Ona Embo miss the exhibition?

"Yes. He won't play."

Anybody else?

"I don't know yet. We'll see how guys respond to treatment over the next day or so and we'll go from there."

Sammis Reyes, who played for you for a little more than a year, plays for Loyola now. How did that happen?

"It was kind of one of those things. Sammis came to me last year, and the writing was on the wall a little bit in terms of playing time with our group, and we talked about that a little bit. He had an opportunity to play for his national team (Chile), and I let him do that, which is very unusual. It's probably 1 in a 100 that it could happen, but I felt like it would give him good exposure to get the minutes and play, and he's a really good student and he loved New Orleans. The opportunity came up that they could have a spot that might be a good fit for him, and ultimately that's what it's about for us--trying to find the best fit for everybody. Today was his birthday. I texted him and said, hey, you haven't come by to see us, but now you can't come until after we scrimmage. He said he wanted to come by and check out the guys and all that. Based on film we've seen of him over there, things are working out really well."

He didn't have to go very far.

"That's right. He didn't have to move out of where he was living and everything's great."

Is there anything in particular you want to see against Loyola?

"I just want to see us start creating a culture that we've been trying to work on for the last two years in terms of just really playing hard, sill trying to push the pace of the game and have a lot of young guys become mature. We have five guys that will be playing virtually for the first time (Kevin Zhang, Moses Wood, Connor Crabtree, Buay Koka and Shakwon Barrett). with Shak and Koka having redshirted last year. They played a little bit, but that's the main thing is those five guys trying to figure out the speed of the game, the physicality of the game, all those different things. It's important."

Week 8 pick 'em results

sscald almost had a perfect week, missing only the Stanford game when Washington State rallied in the fourth quarter to win by 3, and took over first place.

WEEK 8 RESULTS

8

sscald

7

GrentaGreen

6

diverdo
wavetime
chigoyboy
St Amant Wave
WaveON

5

paliii
Guerry

4

mono41
winwave
LSU Law Greenie
Kettrade1

3

charlamange8
Golfer81
DrBox
highwave


OVERALL STANDINGS

43

ssscald

41

winwave

39

mono41
GretnaGreen

38

paliii

37

WaveON

35

LSU Law Greenie
Kettrade1
Guerry

34

highwave
diverdo
Wavetime (missed 1 week)

33

Golfer81
St Amant Wave
chigoyboy

31

charlamange8

27

MNAlum (missed 1 week)

23

Gang_Green (missed 2 weeks)

22

DrBox (missed 1 week)


GAME-BY-GAME RESULTS

Tulane 14 of 17
Georgia 9
Houston 10
Mississippi State 8
Washington State 11
Iowa 5
Michigan State 8
SMU 4

Practice update: Tuesday, Oct. 30

Willie Fritz is not big on injury information, but he said today that three players who sat out all or most of the Tulsa game with injuries should be able to play against South Florida.

Cornerback Thakarius Keyes, who got dinged up early in the game after starting, did not practice today but took mental reps as he watched. I did not see tight end Kendal Ardoin or wide receiver Jacob Robertson, who I knew were hobbling, practice today either, but none of their injuries appear serious.

First, here's Fritz on Keyes.

"He started cramping up and just was having a hard time warming up throughout the game," he said. "We just felt like it would be better to keep him out. Hopefully he'll be fine this week."

I don't get the cramping thing, but Jaylon Monroe played a heck of a game in Keyes' absence, showing the ball skills he exhibited in preseason camp before losing some of his confidence when he gave up plays early in the season. I like Keyes, but he might lose his starting spot if he has another cramping issue because Monroe has a lot of ability, too. As I tweeted at the time, you won't see a cornerback make a better play than he did when he deflected a perfectly thrown deep ball down the sideline as he ran stride for stride with a Tulsa receiver in the second half.

"He really stepped up and played well. That was the best look and demeanor I've seen from him during a game. He got beat on a play right after he got in and he didn't let that affect him. Corners have got to have a short memory, and he really played well throughout the rest of the game. I'm really proud of his approach and how he competed. He's another young guy starting to grow up and play a lot of meaningful minutes and play better and better."

Fritz did not specify what the injuries were for Robertson or Ardoin.

"I think they'll be ready this week," he said.

Freshman Tyrick James started at tight end against Tulsa, with Charles Jones and Will Wallace playing, too. Tulane picked Wallace as one of its offensive Waves of the week along with Corey Dauphine and Dominique Briggs, so he must have graded out extremely well offensively. Briggs got the nod because he is from Tulsa.

Robertson was not missed much because the receivers not named Encalade or Mooney get very few looks. Jabril Clewis caught one pass against Tulsa, and the rest of the wide receivers were shut out on a day when Tulane ran effectively and Justin McMillan threw ineffectively.

Look for McMillan to have a bigger passing day against USF, which has been really poor defensively for much of the year. Georgia Tech ran for 419 yards and even threw for 183 yards, which might be close to its high in the Paul Johnson era--against the Bulls. UMass threw for 401 yards and Houston threw for 419 on its way to an obscene 682 total yards.

USF's rushing defense has been very forgiving. Houston (263), UConn (322), Tulsa (220), Illinois (212) and even Elon (192) have had a lot of success on the ground against the Bulls.

Clearly, Tulane has a realistic chance to win Saturday, but it will have to play better than it has to this point. USF has found ways to win games it looked like it would lose, rallying from a 24-10 deficit in the fourth quarter to beat Tulsa 26-24, rallying from a 19-7 fourth quarter deficit to beat Illinois 25-19 and rallying from a 38-28 fourth quarter deficit to beat Georgia Tech 49-38. Very few teams win three times in the same season after trailing by 10 in the fourth quarter, and although Tulane finished well against Tulsa, finishing has been a team weakness.

This is a game that will define Tulane's season. Win, and the Wave will have realistic bowl hopes, a chance to finish above .500 in conference play for the second time since the perfect season of 1998 and an outside chance to win the AAC West.

Lose, and Tulane would be 3-6 with a trip to Houston still on the docket.

Week 8 pick 'em

As always, the Tulane game counts double, home teams are listed first, neutral sites are noted and the point spreads come from VegasInsider.com consensus:

Tulsa (-2) Tulane
Georgia (-7) Florida (Jacksonville)
Houston (-7.5) South Florida
Mississippi State (-2.5) Texas A&M
Stanford (-3) Washington State
Penn State (-6.5) Iowa
Michigan State (-2.5) Purdue
SMU (+10) Cincinnati

Film study: Tulane v. SMU

1) Tulane's offense and play calling has been ripped to shreds after the bad loss to SMU, but I actually liked the play-calling and variety on the first few possessions before the offense went kaput for the rest of the half.

Bradwell ripped off a 23-yard run with the help of a good block by Keyshawn McLeod on the opening snap, and Banks showed a combination of elusiveness and power on the second play to turn a nothing play into an 8-yard run. Amare Jones went in for a wildcat play and handed off Then Banks ran an option pitch to Jones for a first down and completed a swing pass to Huderson for another first down. Two elements Tulane used on that possession it has not done much this year were the option and throwing to running backs. In fact, this was a bizarre time to criticize Tulane for not throwing to its backs because it happened more often in this game than any other in the Fritz era. I'm not counting two catches that were really pitches that went slightly forward, but in addition to the swing pass to Huderson, there was the wheel route Jones ran for a big gain right before the lightning delay later in the quarter. Tulane also targeted other receivers, with completions to Jabril Clewis and Jacob Robertson that were erased by penalties (one on SMU, one on Tulane).

All that said, the opening drive stalled when Banks was sacked on a third down, knocking Tulane out of field goal range. McLeod got beaten, forcing Banks into an end who started inside on Dominique Briggs, then circled around on the outside to get Banks. Banks needed to get rid of the ball there, but the play broke down quickly.

2) Tulane's defense was very prepared for SMU's offense, sniffing out several plays as they developed. Will Harper stuffed a wide receivers screen on SMU's first series, and Donnie Lewis made a big hit on a reverse he was ready for. The Mustangs got nothing on screens all day, with Lewis stuffing another one for a 2-yard loss. SMU really got nothing going all day other than than the huge touchdown gains that Tulane has been allowing. The Wave has allowed 10 touchdowns of 44 more yards or longer, which is astounding.

3) Color commentator Andre Ware was all over SMU QB Ben Hicks in the first half, and he deserved the criticism. On the reverse, he chose to block no one when he had two guys in front of him and needed to get in the way of somebody. On the high snap that resulted in the safety, he refused to dive for the ball, making a lame attempt to kick it as Cam Sample dove for it. That's weak. I would not have wanted to be Hicks in the film session reviewing that play.

Sample is a really good, but he did not look very coordinated falling on the ball. He had a clear shot at it and should have gotten it for a touchdown instead of inadvertently knocking it out of the end zone for a safety. Hicks basically asked him to recover it.

4) Of the maddening mistakes by the offensive line, none was worse than Tyler Johnson did when Darius Bradwell was stuffed on a third-and-1 play in the first quarter. Johnson started to double team an end, then ran downfield and went right in between the two guys who tackled Bradwell without touching either of them. What is that? I'm lost.

5) John Leglue had a good series on Tulane's TD drive after the safety. He had the primary block on Bradwell's big run to start the drive and he finished with another solid block on Bradwell's TD run. A pulling Johnson also was pivotal on the score, getting over to stone a defender as Bradwell slipped through a hole.

6) Marvin Moody was awful on the most important play of the game, which was SMU's 55-yard TD pass to Xavier Jones on fourth-and-1 from its own 45 while trailing 9-0. Now in fairness to Moody, the alignment Tulane had would have given him no chance to stop the first down, but he never looked at Jones, running to his left for a second at the snap but then deciding to rush the passer while Jones ran free. Jones was his man. Everyone else had a different responsibility on the play, and you can't freelance in that situation. What could have been a 15-yard gain for a first down turned into a ridiculously easy touchdown, changing the tenor of the game.

That was a gusty call by SMU coach Sonny Dykes. Most coaches would have punted in that situation.

7) Tulane's first play on the next series was the best example of why Jonathan Banks will not start tomorrow. The defensive end crashed at the snap, which means the QB has to keep the ball and run to the side the crashing end vacated. Instead, Banks handed to Corey Dauphine, who was clobbered immediately. There have been too many of those misreads from Banks. It did not help that Corey Dublin basically whiffed on his block. too.

On the sack that ended that series, Noah Fisher was in at left tackle and handled his man easily. He did not play well earlier this year. but his pass protection ability is better than the other tackles when he is healthy. The problem on that play came on the other side.

8) Another bust on the offensive line happened on Tulane's next series. McLeod went inside and did not block an outside guy who tackled Bradwell for a 1-yard loss. Even stranger, Ware's first comment before the series started was "Bradwell's running wild along with Dauphine." At that point, Dauphine had one carry for zero yards.

Then, on third down, Banks did not set his feet and threw a bad pass to an open Encalade, but I'm not going to get on Banks as much as Encalade there. He entered the year as Tulane's bell cow receiver, but he showed alligator arms on that play, sticking one hand out to catch it instead of selling out. An average receiver is not expected to make that catch. Encalade should have, and it would have been at least a 20-yard gain instead of a punt.

9) The less said about most of the second quarter, the better, and that goes for both teams, who were inept offensively. An option pitch to Encalade--Tulane's third option pitch of the half--was moderately successful, but that's about it until the last two plays when Banks hit Encalade for a nice gain and then got lucky when the ball was stripped from his hands and bounced right back to him, allowing him to make a nifty sideline completion to Darnell Mooney that put Tulane in field goal range. Of course, Merek Glover's kick was awful. It looked like he tried to kick it too hard, hooking it left.
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