Showing posts with label clemson football; gator bowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clemson football; gator bowl. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2009

PHOTOS FROM THE GATOR BOWL




Thanks to Candy Turner for providing these shots.


FINAL WRAP-UP OF THE GATOR BOWL


As painful as it was, I finally watched the replay of the second half of the Gator Bowl. It took me a little over four hours to watch 30 minutes of football because I watched plays over and over and over, making over five pages of notes in a spiral notebook I had sitting in my lap. I watched most plays in slow motion in order to watch the offensive and defensive line, pass routes, tackling and so forth.

After watching both halves the same way, DVR remote in one hand and a notebook in the other, I can tell you in my honest opinion that Cullen Harper is not the reason we lost this game. I admit that I have been a little on edge over the past week because many of my fellow Tigers fans have blamed the loss on Harper and I couldn't see it. I reserved my judgment until I could take my time, watch the replay, and really break the game down.

Now that I've done that, I think there is plenty of blame to go around as to why we lost. Trying to put the loss on the shoulders of one member of the team in this case is very short-sighted. Mistakes were made by lots of individuals that are part of the team and you win or lose as a team. If the team learns from these mistakes and corrects them, then we've taken something positive out of the loss instead of dwelling on a bunch of negativity. Let's take a look at the second half highlights and lowlights:

HIGHLIGHTS:
Chad Diehl fumble recovery
Diehl is one of those guys who is kind of like an offensive lineman from the standpoint that he does not get a lot of publicity. He just does what he is asked to do, which is block and play special teams. In this instance he made a big play on special teams by recovering a fumbled punt by Nebraksa that gave the Tigers the ball back with great field position.

Cullen Harper/Jacoby Ford
Jacoby Ford and Cullen Harper had already connected for 3 catches and 55 yards in the first half, the key play being the 46 yard pass reception on 3rd and a mile to get the Tigers from their own 3 to mid-field. Ford and Harper followed up with two fantastic plays in the second half: The first one came in the third quarter as the offensive line did a great job of blocking and giving Harper time to throw. Jacoby ran a great route and Harper lofted a beautiful 41 yard pass right down the middle that Ford caught for a TD. The second play was on 4th and 4 late in the 4th quarter, when Harper hit Jacoby for a 16 yard strike that kept the drive going. On a side note, even Steve Beuerlein toned down his criticism of Harper in the second half and gave him credit for standing in the pocket with the corner blitzing and hitting him after he threw on this play.

Da'Quan Bowers
Bowers had a great first half with two tackles for loss and three QB pressures. He came out in the second half and followed that up with two more tackles for loss and two more QB pressures and was credited with a tackle assist. The official stats. only credit Bowers with three TFL's but according to my eyes and notes, he had four. In any event, it was Bowers' most dominating performance all season. As he continues to develop and mature, it is going to be fun to watch him wreak havoc on our opponents.

Andre' McDaniel
McDaniel is another Tiger that continued to make plays in the second half (with one exception) after forcing the Ganz fumble and returning it for a TD in the first half. Andre' had three tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss in the second half and finished the game with 6.5 tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss, a QB pressure, a forced fumble and a TD.

LOWLIGHTS
Tackling (or lack thereof)
In the second half, there were a lot of missed tackles that resulted in Nebraska turning what should have been short to medium gains into big plays. Just a few: On Nebraska's 2nd series of the 2nd half, Chris Clemmons was in perfect position to make a tackle after the whole defensive line (except for Bowers) was blown off the ball but let RB Castille run right by him. The play went for 58 yards. Three plays later, Nebraska scored a TD.

More failure to tackle
In the 4th quarter, with Nebraska facing 3rd and 13, Ganz completed a short pass over the middle and McDaniel was in position to make the tackle and missed it. Instead of the Tigers holding on 3rd down and giving the ball back to the offense, the play went for 20 yards and Nebraska was able to chew up more time off the clock. Later in the 4th quarter, on Nebraska's second to last offensive series of the game with time winding down, RB Castille takes the handoff on their own 41 up the middle and Brandon Maye just flat out misses the tackle. Clemmons also misses him and Castille is off to the races, barely being pushed out of bounds before the goal line. This results in a FG and a five point lead for Nebraska instead of a 2 point lead when the Tigers get the ball on their final possession. A stop by the defense with no points allowed on that drive and a FG on Clemson's drive would have resulted in a win.

Offensive line
Once again in the second half, the Tigers struggled to run the ball. James Davis had 3 attempts for 3 yards, Spiller had 3 attempts for 4 yards and Ford had 1 attempt for 3 yards on an end-around. For the entire game, these three players accounted for a net 46 yards rushing on 20 attempts for an average of 2.3 yards per carry. Let's face it: Nebraska has an outstanding defensive line and their nose tackle Suh would certainly go in the 1st round of the NFL draft if he were to declare himself eligible this year. He almost single-handedly controlled the line of scrimmage and was dominant throughout the entire game, even moreso than Bama's Cody.

Suh practically lined up against everyone on the offensive line and no one could really block him one on one. He constantly crashed through the line and either sacked Harper, made a tackle for loss or just made a "normal" tackle. When we double teamed him, sometimes it didn't matter but other times it provided blitz opportunities or allowed someone else to go free. Suh finished the game with two sacks, four tackles for loss, six solo tackles, two assists and Lord only knows how many QB pressures. Nebraska had a total of five sacks and eleven tackles for loss in the game.

There were so many plays where offensive lineman missed their blocks in the second half that resulted in their man either making the tackle or getting pressure or a sack on the QB that I don't want to take the time and space to list them all. Here is just an overview: Bobby Hutchinson missed two, both on Suh and also had an illegal procedure penalty on third down. Landon Walker also missed on Suh. Mason Cloy missed a block on Suh, Antoine McClain missed a block on Suh and Chris Hairston missed a block but I couldn't get the player's number. The only offensive lineman that I did not note missing a block that resulted in a tackle for loss, QB pressure, sack, etc. is Thomas Austin.

Dropped passes
Midway in the 3rd quarter, Harper threw an accurate bubble screen pass to Jacoby Ford that hit him right in the hands. In my opinion, after watching the replay numerous times and in slow motion, Jacoby lost his focus because in his peripheral vision he could see the Nebraksa defender Amukamra (#21) was closing quick. The ball popped up in the air off of Ford's hands and was then intercepted. Despite what the announcers said, Nebraska really didn't make a great play. Ford just didn't catch the ball.

On next series in the 3rd quarter, facing 3rd and 6, Harper threw an accurate swing pass to a wide open C.J. Spiller that hit him right in the hands but was dropped. Spiller had open field in front of him. On the next play, Maners' punt was blocked, Nebraska got great field position and scored a FG.

In the 4th quarter with a little over eight minutes remaining, Clemson faced 3rd and 4 and Harper threw a pass to Aaron Kelly which hit him in the hands but was dropped. It would have resulted in a first down but instead the Tigers had to punt. The announcer (Beuerlein) said Harper did not make a good throw. It appeared that the ball might have been slightly off line but it hit Kelly in the hands. As soon as Kelly made his break on the slant route, the ball was there and I'm not sure he was ready for it. Another possibility is that like Ford, it could be that Kelly saw the defender coming to put a hit on him and lost focus momentarily. I think if the ball hits you in the hands, you should catch it.

On Clemson's last drive of the game with time winding down and no time outs, the Tigers faced 3rd and goal from the 26 after Harper's sack. The pass from Harper to C.J. Spiller was perfect but the Nebraska defender made a great play on the ball and knocked it away. I don't know if you can really call this one a dropped pass. It was more of a pass break up or pass defended. It could have been caught and maybe it could have even been called pass interference since the defender's body came into Spiller from the back and his hand was on Spiller's helmet.

Blocked punt
In the 3rd quarter, Jimmy Maners' punt was blocked when Sadat Chambers didn't get a good block on the Nebraska player who was rushing in from his right side. It looked like he attempted to just give the guy a push to knock him off balance rather than slide over and get in front of him to get on his pads.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

GATOR BOWL 1st HALF HIGHLIGHTS & LOWLIGHTS


HIGHLIGHTS
C.J. Spiller

Lightning struck in Jacksonville, FL on New Year's Day and as always, it was an awesome sight to behold. How about C.J.'s 33 yard return on the game's opening kickoff? Even better was Spiller's punt return later in the first quarter, also for 33 yards. After catching the punt near the left sideline on the 19, he worked his way all the way over to the right sideline, making six different Nebraska defenders miss him in the process and ended up finally getting tackled on the Cornhuskers' 48 yard line. He had a 10 yard rush on the first play of the 2nd quarter, breaking two tackles along the way.

James Davis

With 1:35 remaining in the 1st quarter, James had a gain of nine yards. On the last play of the 1st quarter, Davis broke two tackles and had a nice gain of gain of 11 yards.

Jacoby Ford
On Clemson's third series of the game, they were on their own 3 yard line and facing 3rd down and 17. Ford caught a short pass from Harper and made the most of it, racing for 46 yards to give the Tigers plenty of breathing room at midfield. Jacoby caught 3 passes for 55 yards in the first half and also returned a Nebraksa punt for 20 yards.

Aaron Kelly/Cullen Harper
Certainly one of the biggest plays of the first half was the 25 yard Cullen Harper pass and the TD catch by Aaron Kelly just before halftime to put the Tigers up 14-3. Harper did a great job of throwing the ball where only Kelly could catch it and Kelly did a great job of positioning himself for the catch. Aaron finished the first half with 3 catches for 39 yards and set the Clemson career reception yards record.

Da'Quan Bowers

Bowers had a great first half and was getting off his blocks and getting in the backfield regularly. He had two tackles for loss on the first downs of Nebraska's first and second offensive series. He also had 3 QB pressures of Nebraska QB Joe Ganz. It is good to see #93 making some plays and I look forward to watching him over the next two (hopefully three) years.

Chris Chancellor
The best hit of the first half goes to Chris Chancellor, hands down. On Nebraska's second offensive series in the first quarter, Nebraksa QB Joe Ganz threw a pass to RB Helu Jr. and Chancellor saw it coming all the way. It was reminiscent of the hit Byron Maxwell put on the UVA WR earlier in the season in that respect. As soon as the ball touched the fingers of Helu Jr., Chancellor arrived instantly and just crushed him. He rang his bell so hard that the whole Gator Bowl crowd let out a big "ooooohhhh".

Andre' McDaniel
Where would Clemson be if not for the big plays of Andre' McDaniel this season? The guy is a play-maker. Nebrasaka QB Ganz rushed to his left on an option play and pitched it out to RB Castille. McDaniel read it all the way and got between the two of them, tipped the pitch, picked it up and took it to the house for a 28 yard TD. What is interesting to note is that McDaniel was red-hot on this defensive series. On the previous play to the TD, McDaniel was right in Ganz's face when he threw the ball that Michael Hamlin nearly intercepted. On the previous play to that one, McDaniel tackled Ganz on a QB keeper and Ganz got up limping. In the first half, McDaniel accounted for a special teams tackle, the tackle on Ganz, the fumble recovery, a TD and a QB pressure.

Crezdon Butler
Butler tackled Nebraska RB Helu Jr. early in the 2nd quarter. Late in the 2nd quarter, after Harper's tipped pass was intercepted by Nebraska deep in Clemson territory, Crezdon returned the favor and intercepted Nebraska QB Ganz on Clemson' s 28 yard line. He returned it 59 yards to the Nebraska 13 to set up Clemson's next TD before halftime.


LOWLIGHTS
First play from scrimmage
On Clemson's first offensive play of the game, they lined up and then shifted into a different formation but had to burn a timeout to avoid a 5 yard penalty for delay of game. This is hard to accept after all the prep. time but it didn't end up hurting us, per se'. It just didn't help. It is questionable if they should have run the exact same play after the timeout as it seems Nebraska was well prepared and had James Davis double covered, so the pass from Harper fell incomplete for no gain.

James Davis fumble
On Clemson's 2nd offensive series, facing 2nd and 8, Davis took the handoff but fumbled the ball. Thankfully, Mason Cloy was alert and recovered it but it resulted in a 3 yard loss and put the Tigers in a 3rd and long which they did not convert.

Offensive line
A lot of fans complained bitterly about Cullen Harper's play and perhaps some complaining is justified. However, Harper was pressured, hit and sacked in the first half due to some mistakes that were not his- breakdowns in protection by the line. I am not naming names to make these guys look bad. Mistakes are going to happen. I appreciate all of the times they make the blocks and protect well but here is what I observed:

Prior to the huge 3rd down conversion where Jacoby was off to the races for 46 yards, Harper was sacked on Clemson's own 1 yard line when Thomas Austin gave up the inside to Nebraska's Steinkuhler. It almost went for a safety.

On 4th and 1, when Clemson elected to go for it on Nebraska's 32 yard line in the 1st quarter, James Davis was tackled by the defender that Bobby Hutchinson was supposed to block and didn't.

On 3rd and 8 with Clemson on Nebraksa's 39 yard line, Landon Walker and Antoine McClain double teamed Nebraska's #93 (Suh) and still let him plow right through both of them to get pressure on Harper. Granted, Harper held on to the ball for a while and Suh's a beast but two on one should be enough to keep this guy out of the backfield.

Late in the 2nd half, after Butler's interception and Clemson on the Nebraska 13 yard line, Mason Cloy just got manhandled by Suh and ended up sacking Harper and throwing him to the turf for a 17 yard loss.

Davis had 8 carries in the first half for 22 yards, an average of 2.75. Spiller had 4 carries for 13 yards, an average of 3.25. Of the 12 carries, only three were for more than 2 yards.

Failure to take advantage of excellent field position and opportunities on offense

It's a shame that the Tigers could do nothing with the excellent field position they had on nearly every offensive series in the first half. On the first series, Clemson started on their own 43 and went 3 and out. On the second series, they started on their own 41 and again went 3 and out. On the third series, they drove from their own 10 to the Nebraska 32, chose to go for it on 4th and 1 and had a timeout to discuss and prepare and still didn't convert. On the fourth series, the Tigers started on Nebraska's 48, had 1st and goal from the 5 and ended up with a 3rd and goal from the 9. Buccholz then had the FG blocked. On the fifth series, Clemson started on the Nebraska 41 and went 3 and out. This makes me sick just to think about all of these missed opportunities.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

HARPER VS. BEUERLEIN, ROUND 1


Although I was at the Gator Bowl, I always enjoy watching the replay on TV because you get a closer view and multiple angles to see the plays from. Having a DVR is even better because you can rewind a play and watch it in slow motion. I just watched the first half on TV for the first and I was struck by the fact that listening to the tv announcers can potentially change your perspective on the game and the players you are watching if you let their opinions influence you. For those of you who were not able to attend and watched the game at home, imagine if you could have used a special remote control that allowed you to hear the game action (crowd, pads popping, whistles, referees calls, etc.) but muted the announcers' comments throughout the entire game. How might your perspective, opinions and experience of watching the game be different?

One of the announcers for this game was Steve Beuerlein, a former QB for Notre Dame and six different NFL teams, who continuously criticized Cullen Harper throughout the first half. Now, let me make it clear that I have not watched the replay of the second half yet, so I am only going to discuss the first. Let me also make it clear that I am not going to try and defend Cullen Harper's play in the first half as perfect. However, I do think Beuerlein was overly critical of Harper and at first I thought it was because being a former QB, he was more prone to do that. However, Beurerlein didn't seem to let up even though he should know that no QB is perfect throughout an entire game. Certainly if you look back at the stats. on his own career, just from 1996-2000 and the 59 games he played as a Carolina Panther, he was sacked 191 times, threw 50 interceptions and fumbled 44 times. His overall pass completion percentage for his NFL career is 56.9. In his career, over 147 games played, he was sacked 332 times, threw 112 interceptions (to 147 TD's) and fumbled 70 times. (All stats from NFL.com). Do these stats. look like those of a perfect QB that avoided pressure, always threw the ball out of bounds and never made a poor decision?

It's also interesting to note that Beuerlein did not criticize Ganz during the first half but just for comparison's sake, he was 9 for 20 with 0 TD's, had one fumble that was returned by Andre' McDaniel for a Tigers touchdown, threw one interception right to Crezdon Butler that should have been returned for a touchdown and his team was down 14-3. Moving on, let's look more closely at Cullen's numbers for the first half: 8 of 19 with one interception and one TD. Let's break down those numbers further below. Harper's completions/attempts (0/0) are listed after each passing play:


1st QUARTER
On the first play of the game, the "trick" play after changing formations, Davis was double-covered and the pass from Harper fell incomplete. 0/1. On 2nd down, Harper was flushed out of the pocket and threw the ball away. 0/2. On 3rd down, he completed a pass to Ford. 1/3. On the second series, he missed Aaron Kelly, who was open. 1/4. On the third series, he completed a pass to Ford, who broke it for 46 yards. 2/5. On 1st down, he threw a screen to Spiller that fell incomplete. 2/6. On 2nd down, pass completed to Ford. 3/7. On 3rd down, he completed a pass to Faerber for the first. 4/8. On 1st down, he led Grisham too far and underthrew it. 4/9. On 2nd down, completion to Spiller. 5/10. On 3rd down, completion to Kelly for 8 yards. 6/11. On the fourth series, with receivers covered and Clemson facing 2nd and goal, he scrambled and then attempted a "push pass"- a Favre-like flick that was a little dangerous. 6/12

2nd QUARTER
On 3rd down, completion to Kelly. 7/13. On the fifth series, Harper threw to Jacoby Ford on 1st down, who let the ball go through his hands. 7/14. On 3rd down, he was criticized by Beuerlein for running to his right out of the pocket into pressure and throwing the ball away when Nebraska was only rushing four. Here is the situation on that play: #93 for Nebraska- Suh- was double teamed by Landon Walker and Antoine McClain and plowed through both of them. The safety blitzed from the right corner and James Davis was responsible for the block but let him get around his left side on the back side of Harper, which usually results in either a sack or a stripped ball. The pocket was collapsing due to pressure from these two defenders and Harper chose to run right, which is the general direction the pressure was coming from Suh but he could not have rolled to his left because that is the direction the safety was getting pressure from. Now, it's easy for someone sitting up in the booth or on a seat or couch to say he should have done something different. Maybe he should have stepped up two steps into the pocket away from the pressure. However, if everyone is covered, then what? Throw the ball away or scramble. Harper, as we all know, does not scramble well. So, whether he rolled into Suh's pressure and threw it away or stepped up in the pocket and threw it away, he threw it away. He didn't get stripped or sacked and he didn't try to force the ball into coverage and have it picked. 7/15

On the sixth series, on 2nd down the pass attempt was batted down and even if completed would have resulted in Aaron Kelly getting killed on a bubble screen. 7/16. On 3rd down, a Nebraska defender came through untouched and Harper was hit as he threw- incomplete. 7/17. On the seventh series, on 1st down, Harper's pass was tipped on a great defensive play by Nebraksa's Steinkuhler and intercepted. 7/18. On the 8th series, on 1st down from the Nebraska 13, Harper was sacked for a 17 yard loss. Once again, let's look a little closer at what happened: The beast known as Suh- #93 for Nebraska, manhandled Mason Cloy by getting Cloy moving to his left and then Suh just simply changed direction, gave him a swat-and-swim move to get by before wrapping Cullen up and slinging him like a ragdoll. Beuerlein again was very critical of Harper for not getting rid of the ball and this time, the criticism was a little more deserved because Cullen was looking for Grisham all the way. Grisham's ran what looked like a hook route and was open for a split second but it was a dangerous throw. Harper pumped towards and held the ball but he did have a screen to Spiller wide open, who was running right out of the backfield. It was too late because Suh was on him at that point. On the very next play, Harper throws a TD to Kelly in the end zone. 8/19. Beuerlein says he thought the pass was late and that Kelly had to turn 360 degrees to catch it. Clearly, while running the route, Kelly turned to look for the ball over his right shoulder, then turned his back toward the end zone when the ball was in the air and then turned left because Harper threw the ball over to the left side of the end zone so that Kelly could shield himself and the ball from the defender and make the catch.

Monday, January 5, 2009

BACK FROM JACKSONVILLE!


It's been a while since the last post but I am now back in the saddle after a few days in Jacksonville and Savannah enjoying some time off. The Gator Bowl was a lot of fun despite my disappointment in the final outcome of the game. My hotel room at the Hyatt overlooked the St. Johns River and was very close to Jacksonville Landing where there was a live band playing after the game and all kinds of festivities in addition to shops, restaurants and bars/clubs. I got to see quite a few of the Clemson players out and about, including Cullen Harper who I photographed riding a mechanical bull.

I also took some photos of a car that pulled up in front of the Hyatt after the game. You may have seen it on the live television broadcast when they showed it in the parking lot at the stadium. The owner is obviously a diehard Clemson Tigers fan but I could not believe all stuff all over it. If you look closely at some of the hundreds of tiger paws on the car, you will see where many Tiger football team members have signed inside of them. Even the interior of the car was customized in orange. I am not sure if this will be a collectors item you'll see at Barrett Jackson anytime soon but it was great entertainment.

The weather, except maybe for some cool winds on the morning of the game, was great. There were Clemson Tigers fans and orange everywhere but a lot of Nebraska fans, too. Every Nebraska fan that I encountered and/or spoke to was extremely nice and were very good sports before, during and after the game. I think they were just happy to be there and supported their football team by chanting "Go big red" a lot. The Jacksonville Jaguars stadium is first class with everything you would expect in an NFL stadium- comfortable seats, cup holders, escalators, a jumbotron on each end of the field, Outback Steakhouse takeout and so on. The one deficiency that I noticed about it was that the concourses are not very wide and therefore the crowds do not flow through well at all. However, the overall experience was fantastic and I would definitely go back again.

I'm looking forward to watching the game again in HD on the wide screen with DVR remote in-hand to get a little better perspective on things than the one I had from my seat. I know the game has been covered seven ways to Sunday by now but I will post a wrap-up of my own tomorrow. I will also be covering how the former Tigers playing in the NFL did in the first round of the playoffs.














Friday, December 26, 2008

FROM 3-4 TO THE GATOR BOWL!


The kickoff of the 2009 Konica Minolta Gator Bowl between the Clemson Tigers and Nebraska Cornhuskers is less than 7 days away! I can think of no better way to spend New Year's Day than watching the Tigers play. Even though the expectations were very high coming into this season, I think all Tigers fans would agree that we are very fortunate to be playing in a prestigious New Year's Day bowl game after the way things unfolded in the beginning and middle part of the schedule. I think back to the feeling I had while sitting in the Georgia Dome at halftime of the Alabama game and after the game. I remember how I felt numb sitting in Death Valley after the Maryland game, almost in a state of shock. I recall being in Winston-Salem and thinking to myself that Tommy Bowden had just sealed his fate with that loss to Wake. The media talked about how the mighty had fallen and Bowden's hot seat was the hottest it had ever been. At this point, it began to get tiresome listening to reports about our offensive line problems, division among the team, how Harper was playing hurt and it just wasn't a fun time to be a Clemson Tigers fan.

However, next up on the roller-coaster ride was a mixture of surprise and relief when it was announced that Bowden was "stepping down". After the announcement of Dabo Swinney as interim coach and listening to his press conference, I felt excitement and pride to the point that tears came to my eyes. I am proud of the way that the team responded afterwards. I am proud of the way coach Swinney unified not only the team but the university and the fans. After the Ga. Tech loss, I didn't have so much of a sick feeling afterwards. I did hate that the 8 year old who sat behind me with his dad and screamed "Go Jackets" seemingly for the ENTIRE game left satisfied. I will never understand why some CU fans sell their tickets to just anybody and force their fellow fans to have to listen to the opposing fans carrying on but I digress. I always hate losing but during the Ga. Tech game, I began to see some light at the end of the tunnel. I had hope. It was great to finally get a win against BC and to do it on the road was even better. Then, we just demolished Duke. Detractors can say whatever they want but I was as nervous about playing Duke this year as I have ever been. We got a great win over Virginia on the road even though I still heard the detractors say how our offense was anemic and this and that. I looked at it as a W. Sure, it's always nice to put up points but when the clock hits 0:00, the W is what counts and it was just a good, old-fashioned, grind-it-out defensive battle. Then, in the annual rivalry against the gamecocks in Death Valley it was, well, just pure bliss. I was wet and cold but jumping for joy the entire game. The only time I was nervous was when SC came out and drove the the length of the field for a TD after the second half kickoff and made it 24-14. We ended up scoring another TD and making big play after big play and the game was never in doubt again. Swinney was then named the head coach and shortly thereafter it was announced that we were playing Nebraska in the Gator Bowl on New Year's Day. Now, I ask you- how cool is that after sitting at 3-4 after the Tech game?

The only way to make this turnaround story even better is to get a win in the Gator Bowl game. Most of the national sportscasters are predicting a Nebraska win but I think the Tigers can pull it off, although it will certainly not be easy. I have studied Nebraska quite a bit since the announcement that they will be our opponent. I have a lot of respect for their offense and they too are having a similar turnaround season. They score a lot of points and have some great weapons on offense. They have a great coach and a strong fan base. It should be an exciting game and I believe we will need to score a minimum of 30 points to get a victory.

The team was scheduled to meet at 3 p.m. today at the team hotel in Jacksonville, their first since the Christmas holiday break. The Tigers should have good weather for their practices with the exception of Monday. According to the Weather Channel, the current weather in Jacksonville is party sunny and 78 degrees. The extended forecast calls for similar weather through the weekend but a 40% chance of rain on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday are both expected to be mostly sunny, although the highs will drop to around 69-70 degrees. On game day, the forecast is for a high of 69 with scattered showers with the chance of precipitation at only 30%. I can't wait until kickoff. Let's finish off this wild season with a win against Nebraksa. GO TIGERS!!!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

NEBRASKA FOOTBALL NEWS AND BOWL UPDATE


The matchup between the Clemson Tigers and the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Konica-Minolta Gator Bowl kicks off in just 16 days and I'm still surprised at the lack of Nebraska football news and on the matchup in general. The Nebraska football program has a strong tradition and quite a large fan base that I presume wants to keep up with the latest on their team's bowl preparations, how they match up with Clemson and so on. I certainly understand that both teams are going to keep things close to the vest and not give the opponent any advantage but it seems odd that there is so very little coming out of Nebraska or from the national media. So, for your enjoyment and to save you the time it takes to search dozens of sites covering Nebraska football and national sports sites, here is a couple of things to check out: (Note- links do not open in a new page, so use your back button to return to this page). Follow this link to HuskerExtra.com for an article and this link to Huskers.com for an article. NBC Sports also has a set of team stats for comparison which you can view by clicking here.

ESPN GATOR BOWL PREVIEW CLIP