[NU Sports] WILDCAT WRAP: Northwestern 31, Indiana 28

Jonathan Michael Hawkins spiritu at northwestern.edu
Fri Nov 16 13:12:18 CST 2007


WARNING:  This rant is *long*.

I think improving the experience *inside* the stadium is key.  One thing
Canham's legacy has done to hurt NU is leave us with a Sports Marketing
department that is focused almost exclusively on gimmicks.

For instance, we have this awesome jumbotron in the Northeast corner of the
stadium, and along the South side of the stadium, we have two scoreboards
whose stated purpose is to keep the fans in the stadium posted on the status
of other games from around the horn.

The jumbotron practically never shows replays of the play that just happened
on the field.  It most definitely never shows plays that fans might be
interested in checking out the replay on.  The stated purpose of this is
that they are not allowed to show controversial calls inside the stadium.
Forgive me for my lack of faith, but this is bullshift.  Every other Big Ten
stadium runs their jumbotron in a very, very different fashion.  And they
most definitely show controversial calls.

The important thing our scoreboard operator needs to understand is that the
Jumbotron and south scoreboard LED displays are there to at least provide
the butt-in-seat fan with the same experience he would have at home.  It's
an "on-field graphics package", as it were.  I cannot tell you how
frustrating it is to be a season ticket holder, and to see a play that's
"being reviewed", and being completely unable to accomplish my own personal
review from where I sit in the stands.

Yes, we couldn't do that 10 years ago.  But any argument that "we couldn't
do this 10 years ago" and thus my theory is invalid fails to appreciate that
the new expectation for fans is to be able to do that.  Instead of meeting
that expectation, we put up fancier versions of the crappy scoreboard
graphics they have inside Welsh-Ryan arena, we put up stupid ads, and we
fail to show the promised continuous score updates in the south end zone.
Those things should be running like the ESPN bottom line (in fact, they
*could* show the ESPN bottom line.  I bet ESPN would license that to us.),
but instead they're telling WILLIE THE CRAPPY SCAB REPLACEMENT WILDCAT Happy
70th birthday every single game this season!

More importantly: why would a fan come to the game, sit through potentially
inclement weather (although we had none this season), to get a lesser
experience than he would if he sat at home and watched the game on HD?

Along the lines of lesser experience, the food and drink options at Dyche
continue to be woefully inadequate.  Again, there's really no excuse for
this, and the only logical explanation is a lack of desire to recognize that
the problem exists by the Athletic Department.  The spaces for concessions
are rather large; there is plenty of room to set up deep fryers, commercial
grills, and the like.  But they don't.  We still have the same crappy
concessions that other schools moved on from years ago.  This hurts the
gameday experience.  Last week, in fact, some management type was yelling at
the students working the concession stand (note: the students work for a
donation from the Athletic Department to their org.  Don't presume to yell
at them, stupid Sodexho morons.)  When I ordered a bottle of diet pepsi, he
forgot to remember that I don't work for him, and literally yelled at me "WE
DON'T HAVE ANY IN BOTTLES."  The appropriate response was more like, "I'm
very sorry sir, we're out of bottles of Diet Pepsi.  May I get you a large
fountain diet pepsi for the same price?"  A minor complaint, to be sure, but
Bob the partner at the law firm isn't going to appreciate that sort of
thing.

The in-game non-football entertainment is beyond terrible.  My beloved
Northwestern University Marching Band discovered something this year, and I
think fans sent mail to this list in fact about this problem.  When NUMB
stands in its assigned seats and faces South instead of East, the fans get
more into the band because they can hear them.  When other teams' bands come
and face the home side of the stadium, we hear more of their band than we do
of NUMB.  The solution is to move the student section and the band across
the field from the home side, so that when the loudest cheering goes on, the
older folks are more inspired to take to their feet.  This is how the
University of Texas does it, and I think it's the right call.  The
alternative is to do what Wisconsin and Michigan, among other schools, do,
and that's to place NUMB in the North or the South end zone, so that they're
facing pretty much the entire stadium.  Where they are now makes them
ineffective.

The other things, like the "pizza giveaway" and the "t-shirt toss" and all
that stuff, either need to go or be revamped.  Nobody cares about them.  The
stupid "throw the ball through the upright" thing needs to go.  All of that
stuff just seems like total amateur hour.  Another amateur hour thing was
the people on the jumbotron singing "Go U Northwestern" terribly, which
thankfully got pulled about halfway through the season.  That was simply
embarrassing.  And finally, when your sound has a 60hz hum running through
it, as a lot of the video shown on the jumbotron does, it means it's been
made by people who aren't professionals and that it was checked by people
who aren't professionals.  Our athletics department spends millions on
football, and those production qualities make it seem pathetically worse
than a high school football game (where I come from, at least, in Texas).

Finally, the Athletics Department MUST realize that it began its long, slow
murder of the gameday experience at NU when it shut down the fraternity
tailgates, and moved to a policy of "only the rich old people get to
tailgate at the stadium.  The rest of you get family-friendly Wildcat
Alley."  My group of young alums got together a few years back and spent a
very good deal of money to buy our way onto the list of West Lot
tailgaters.  If we hadn't has as many people to contribute as we did, we
could never have afforded to get enough priority points to do it.  But we
seem to be the only ones who've done this.  At other schools, the
demographic makeup of the tailgating lots (and interest in tailgating) just
isn't the case.  I suspect that providing a way for people who actually want
to tailgate and cheer for NU to get West Lot and East Lot passes would
improve gameday atmosphere.

As it stands, most of the rich folks who own those passes seem to give them
away to the other team's fans ALL THE TIME.  This is just pathetic.  Giving
your pass to another team's fan more than once a season should be automatic
grounds for revocation.  NU should provide a strongly encouraged and easy
way (online, and/or call the Wildcat ticket office and press 7 or something)
of giving your parking pass for the week to an alum, young alum, or current
student that has signed some sort of (non-enforceable) pledge that they'll
tailgate with a donated parking pass.  Anyone who successfully tailgates
with these things for a season's worth of games (say, 6) should get enough
points to have their own pass outright.  Reward dedication to the team and
the school and to the gameday experience.  I'm sure you could find someone
who'd take a hundred bucks to be the gameday tailgate inspector, and go find
the people who took the passes and ensure they weren't Iowa fans or
something.

Okay, rant over.  Seriously, though.  Fitz is doing a fine job with the
team.  It wasn't so long ago we were lauding Randy Walker for getting us 6
wins in three straight seasons.  Now we've got 6 wins, and gloriously, we
expect more.  This is a good thing, as long as we realize just how far NU
football has come in 12 years.  But we cannot continue to accept the
mediocre gameday experience.  It is, in my mind, the single biggest culprit
for why attendance sucked so mightily this year and last.

Thanks for reading this far,

Jonathan

On Nov 16, 2007 11:25 AM, Jeff Beamsley <jeff.beamsley at hilgraeve.com> wrote:

> At least you can't blame the Bears, Sox, or Cubs for it this year.
>
> Since I live in Michigan, I don't know how many NW games were available
> locally, but there were precious few that we were able to see.  IMHO,
> seeing
> NU play well on TV is going to do more than anything else to get butts
> into
> the seats.
>
> Beyond that, it is all about marketing.  The juggernaut that is Michigan
> football today is the direct result of Don Canham's innovative marketing.
> When he came on board in 1968, Michigan was averaging around 50%
> attendance
> too.  He hired Bo, scheduled the hated ND, promoted the rivalry with OSU,
> replaced the grass with Astroturf, invented tailgating, sports marketing,
> and
> all sorts of special events before during and after the games.  A lot of
> people at the time thought that Canham was crazy, but he knew that the
> same
> old stuff was not going to get the job done.  If NU wants to fill the
> seats
> on Saturday, they need to think outside the box and find their own version
> of
> Don Canham who will likely do stuff that will upset us too.
>
> Jeff
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nwu-sports-bounces at tssi.com [mailto:nwu-sports-bounces at tssi.com] On
> Behalf Of Jonathan Hodges
> Sent: Monday, November 12, 2007 1:44 PM
> To: johnadeg at comcast.net
> Cc: nwu-sports at tssi.com
> Subject: Re: [NU Sports] WILDCAT WRAP: Northwestern 31, Indiana 28
>
> Attendance was listed at 20,466, the lowest attended Big Ten game at Ryan
> Field in a long time (most likely into the 70's although I don't have
> statistics going back nearly that far) - prior to that last year's
> Illinois
> contest (just over 22,000) was the next lowest.
>
> For reference, NU averaged 24,589 for its 7 home games in 2007, about
> 2,500
> below the previous recent season average low (in 2002), which currently
> ranks
> NU 85th nationally in average attendance on the year.  In fact, the total
> attendance is lower than that in 2001, which had 2 fewer home games.
> Also, on average, NU has only filled 52.17% of the seats this year.
>
> Sure, winning goes a long way towards filling seats and we've talked the
> attendance issue to death, but the final 2007 numbers are definitely
> discouraging and show that something needs to be done.
>
> Jonathan
>
> On Nov 12, 2007 12:35 PM, <johnadeg at comcast.net> wrote:
>
> > I don't know if Indiana had more fans at the game than NU did, but the
> > stadium looked like it was half empty.  That sure doesn't help in
> > trying to get a bowl bid.
> >
> > John DeGroat
> >  -------------- Original message ----------------------
> > From: "SjT (Stephen J. Truog)" <sjtruog at yahoo.com>
> > > WILDCAT WRAP - NORTHWESTERN 31, INDIANA 28
> > >
> > > There are a lot of ways you could look at Northwestern's 31-28
> > > season home finale win over Indiana. It could be a team finally
> > > getting over that hump and learning to win games they need to finish
> > > when they have leads in the fourth quarter. It could be the Cats
> > > almost blowing another game they should have easily won with
> > > turnovers and mistakes. It could be a case of some gutsy
> > > performances from seniors and team leaders for the home finale. Or
> > > it could be just another exciting finish to a Northwestern football
> > > game in Ryan Field by the comeback Cats.
> > >
> > > But it might just be that Saturday's game will go down as the Replay
> > > Bowl. Several key plays - including two touchdowns (and what
> > > probably should have been a
> > > third) - were held up while officials upstairs took an extra look to
> > > get the call right. And when a fumble appeared to end Indiana's
> > > final drive and give NU the victory, the Evanston crowd had to hold
> > > their breath while replay officials went to work before they could
> > > confirm the call on the field and celebrate the Senior Day victory.
> > >
> > > Northwestern came into the game after a heartbreaking home loss to
> > > Iowa last week in a game where NU dominated the first quarter and
> > > played well most of the game, but for the second straight week, a
> > > 17-14 NU lead at the end of three evaporated into a Wildcat loss. In
> > > fact, of the five Wildcat defeats this year, they were leading
> > > Michigan, Purdue and Iowa in the fourth and had four chances to win
> > > at the end against Duke. Only the Ohio State debacle was out of
> > > reach. So while no one doubted the Cats ability to comeback, their
> > > ability to finish out games they're leading was definitely called
> > > into question.
> > >
> > > The weather was a brisk Midwestern autumn day, perfect for the
> > > pigskin, and the Hoosiers brought quite a bit more fans than they
> > > usually do to Evanston. No doubt they were anticipating this game
> > > being win No. 7 that would make a long-awaited bowl bid all but
> > > certain.
> > > The IU Marching Hundred band was also in attendance, making for a
> > > spirited afternoon. Though I must say, between their little march
> > > song for IU first downs (complete with odd hand gestures) and that
> > > blasted whistle for Purdue, you're gonna need to bring some earplugs
> > > to the old bucket game next week to leave with a sense of sanity.
> > > C'mon Marching Hundred, you have the INDIANA Jones march to play,
> > > why are you milking cows?
> > >
> > > The first quarter against started much like last week's first
> > > quarter except with different results.
> > > Once again, Northwestern dominated the opening 15 minutes,
> > > controlling the clock, moving it up and down the field and
> > > dominating the total yardage on offense.
> > > But the Cats had to settle for a field goal on their opening march
> > > and the Hoosiers didn't even need to put their offense on the field
> > > as the ensuing kick was returned 91 yards for a touchdown.
> > >
> > > Coming into the game, most purple-clad fans knew that Northwestern
> > > needed to finish the drive with "6 not 3"
> > > and I was even willing to print up shirts saying "I HATE FIELD
> > > GOALS" given how kicks have been an, um, adventure this year. But
> > > the first 16 minutes of the game just made the point all the
> > > greater. Northwestern had the ball for 31 of the game's first 35
> > > plays. The defense even forced a 3-and-out after an interception
> > > where C.J. Bacher woefully underthrew a deep pass. But with IU's
> > > kick return and NU's drives stalling for a field goal and a missed
> > > field goal, the Cats were down
> > > 3-7 at the start of the second quarter despite dominating every
> > > phase of the game outside of special teams.
> > >
> > > Things looked even worse when the Hoosiers finally woke up and drove
> > > down for a touchdown on their second possession. And despite a great
> > > burst up the middle by Tyrell Sutton, showing flashes of the No. 19
> > > NU fans know and love, moved the ball deep into IU territory, the
> > > Cats promptly squandered yet another scoring chance when a touchdown
> > > pass by Bacher bounced out of Ross Lane's hands and into an IU
> > > defender in the end zone.
> > >
> > > The Wildcats had had four offensive series, all marching to midfield
> > > or beyond, and had only three points. Two ended in field goal tries,
> > > while two ended in interceptions. NU fans were wondering what they
> > > had to do to score when something almost unheard of in recent
> > > Wildcat history happened.
> > >
> > > Indiana was driving off the turnover when quarterback Kellen Lewis
> > > was knocked out for a play. When backup Ben Chappell came in and
> > > made one throw, the NU defense made the interception and senior
> > > Eddie Simpson ran it back 40 yards for the touchdown. The teams
> > > exchanged punts until halftime and the Cats headed to the locker
> > > room down only 10-14, thanks to their defense.
> > >
> > > At halftime, the NU Marching Band put on a great show - once again
> > > bringing out "Rhapsody in Blue" for "American Airlines Day" at Ryan
> > > Field in a wonderfully sly slam on corporate sponsorship. Sadly,
> > > though, the usual "olde plus four" and senior recognition was rushed
> > > by time and the teams coming back on the field a bit early. In fact,
> > > the alma mater was performed at a brisk pace - quicker than the
> > > fight song is most days - to rush off the field in time. After all
> > > their hard work to make Saturdays special, the seniors in NUMB
> > > deserve a better send-off!
> > >
> > > Another quick editorial comment: The Wildcat defense played much
> > > better this game than in the past - more aggressive and more
> > > pressuring. Our front four were able to get consistent pressure on
> > > IU all day, and even if their line isn't as good as I thought, they
> > > still have one of the more mobile quarterbacks in Hardy who can
> > > scramble out of most jams. I am NOT trying to say Colby deserves to
> > > stay as defensive coordinator, though. For some reason, he refused
> > > to give Sherrick McManus any help all day on James Hardy.
> > > I love McManis' enthusiasm and aggression, but Hardy is indeed every
> > > bit as good as advertised and had a huge height advantage all day.
> > > By putting McManus one-on-one and having no inside help when McManis
> > > had to play the fade down by the end zone, Hardy easily cut one in
> > > for a wide open score and could have done so all day if the Hoosiers
> > > had gone to him more.
> > > Overall, he only had a quiet 100 yards or so - not nearly as bad as
> > > it could have been with our defensive game plan to not double cover
> > > the best receiver in the league. But we did come with more blitz
> > > schemes and got good pressure when only rushing the front line.
> > >
> > > But the game started to really get crazy in the second half. The
> > > officials really hadn't played much of a role in the game - not
> > > calling a lot both ways and staying out of it for the most part. But
> > > that usually commendable approach could not be tolerated any more on
> > > the first series of the second half when a scrambling Lewis -
> > > running toward the sideline with THE MARKER ON IT - took a couple
> > > steps over the line before hurling a 70-yard touchdown strike to
> > > break the game open again at 20-10 Indiana.
> > >
> > > To be honest, I didn't even see who caught it downfield or even know
> > > it was a TD until a bit later.
> > > I was too stunned that with an official AND A MARKER right by the
> > > play, no one had thrown a flag for crossing the line. From midfield
> > > and sixty rows up, I could clearly see two steps past the line of
> > > scrimmage and pointed in stunned outrage, yelling for replay in
> > > disbelief that no flag had been thrown. Were these officials napping
> > > through the game? How could my so-so eyesight spot this so obviously
> > > while they missed it, I incredulously thought.
> > >
> > > Ten years ago, it would have just been an outrage post for the
> > > message boards afterwards, but thank goodness we have instant replay
> > > and they buzzed down in the nick of time. It was a huge turning
> > > point in the game as the play came on third down and when the folks
> > > upstairs finally got it right, it became a 14-point swing because
> > > the Cats drove down after the ensuing punt to take a 17-14 lead on
> > > Sutton's 1-yard plunge.
> > >
> > > After the Wildcat defense again forced a punt (a make-up replay
> > > reversal had given the Hoosiers one first down but they couldn't get
> > > another), the situation was all too familiar for NU fans. The Cats
> > > had the ball, up 17-14 in the second half. Against Purdue and Iowa,
> > > they had been in this situation many times and failed to get that
> > > "next score" that would put some distance between themselves and
> > > their opponent. But senior Kim Thompson stepped up this time to make
> > > sure his home finale would not be the third game in a row of blown
> > > opportunities. Thompson caught two key third down conversions to
> > > spur a drive that ended in a touchdown when senior Brandon Roberson
> > > turned a halfback option into a touchdown pass to a wide open
> > > Thompson in the end zone.
> > >
> > > The play was a great call and Thompson snuck behind the defense and
> > > could have set up camp in the end zone for a couple weeks before
> > > being detected. However, IU's defense forced a delay in the pass and
> > > tipped it enough that it took a fantastic catch by Thompson on the
> > > side of the end zone to get the score. Of course the play was
> > > reviewed, but this time the refs had made the right call on the lead
> > > and the Cats were up 28-17.
> > > Finally, some breathing distance for Wildcat fans - were they
> > > learning to finish?
> > >
> > > The other great thing about this drive - and all of NU's possessions
> > > in the second half this week - was that they did not forget about
> > > the running game. In the Iowa and Purdue losses, Sutton rarely
> > > touched the ball. On Saturday, he was fed early and often on NU's
> > > drives. He didn't break any long, but it kept the Cats in manageable
> > > third downs and kept the defense honest against the run and pass.
> > >
> > > With just over a quarter left, however, NU fans knew this one was
> > > not over. Indiana finally seemed to realize that they had the Big
> > > Ten's best receiver in single coverage and used a couple big passes
> > > to Hardy to set up a touchdown to cut the lead back to three.
> > > The touchdown itself probably should have been added to the replay
> > > list for the day. I was surprised no one challenged it. They didn't
> > > show a replay on the jumbotron, but it sure looked like it may have
> > > been slipping out as he dove for the end zone and barely crossed the
> > > line.
> > >
> > > In any case, the score stood and instead of being up 17-14, NU was
> > > now up 24-21 entering the final fifteen minutes. Bacher quickly
> > > drove the Cats downfield - aided by another big Thompson catch - and
> > > the Cats were facing 3rd and Goal at the Hoosier 3 yard line with
> > > just over 10 minutes left.
> > >
> > > As soon as they ran the play and before the ball was thrown, I
> > > yelled out the words I now wanted to print on a new T-shirt: "I HATE
> > > THE FADE." You can run a fade when you have a huge height edge like
> > > Hardy had.
> > > You can run the fade when you have a great leaper. You can run it
> > > when you have a perfect throw or the far side of the field.
> > > Northwestern had none of those things. All I thought would happen
> > > was an incomplete and we'd have to go for it on 4th down ("NO MORE
> > > FIELD GOALS!" was another T-shirt idea) ... but it was worse.
> > > Indiana intercepted it and with 10:19 remaining in the game,
> > > Northwestern's third interception gave Indiana a golden chance to
> > > take the lead and get that big bowl win.
> > >
> > > The Cats brought pressure and sacked Hardy once, but the next time
> > > he escaped with a big scramble and fueled a drive that ended with an
> > > easy Hardy touchdown. With no inside help and McManis having to play
> > > the fade, Hardy cut it in for a wide open score to put Indiana ahead
> > > 28-24 with six minutes remaining.
> > >
> > > Now was when the Cats had folded in the past two weeks, but not this
> > > time. Everything finally came together for play calling, Bacher and
> > > the entire offense as the Cats gave the home fans and seniors
> > > another thrilling finish. It's telling that the Cats had four sets
> > > of downs on the final drive and on each of the four first downs and
> > > four second downs, NU dialed up a rushing play. Big difference from
> > > the past couple weeks!
> > >
> > > Not only did the running game keep the defense honest and mix up the
> > > offense, it took a lot of time off the clock and surprisingly, the
> > > Hoosiers didn't empty their supply of timeouts to keep more left on
> > > the clock for a comeback drive. The balance finally paid off. On 3rd
> > > and 2 from the IU 3, everyone in the house was expecting a run.
> > > There was almost an audible gasp from the crowd when Bacher kept the
> > > ball and dropped back. Thankfully for the purple-clad fans, he
> > > zipped a perfect strike to Lane for the touchdown and with 44
> > > seconds left, NU topped their "magical mark" of 30 points that seems
> > > to determine wins and losses for the season to take the lead at
> > > 31-28.
> > >
> > > A poor kickoff out of bounds gave the Hoosiers one last chance and
> > > after a couple first downs moved Indiana within range of a couple
> > > Hail Mary's (and that was a scary thought for NU with Hardy on the
> > > field).
> > > But the Wildcat pressure continued to be fierce and David Ngene came
> > > up with perhaps the play of the year to knock the ball free on a
> > > sack to seal the victory.
> > > Of course, the play would be reviewed. But after what seemed like an
> > > endless wait for the fans in Ryan Field, the call stood and
> > > Northwestern had won its sixth game of the season and ended the home
> > > slate on an high note with a thrilling 31-28 victory.
> > >
> > > The Big Ten has 10 bowl eligible teams heading into the final week
> > > of play, so six wins likely won't be enough for an extra game this
> > > year. This means the Cats have to come up with their best game of
> > > the year to win at rival Illinois - coming off their biggest win in
> > > years - next week to secure a postseason trip, and even then it
> > > might not be a sure thing if other upsets happen.
> > >
> > > But all that analysis - and the continued beating of the heads
> > > against the wall for letting Duke and Iowa slip away at home - can
> > > wait. For now it was a wonderful scene for fans to see the Wildcat
> > > team head over to the students and band to victoriously sing "Go U
> > > Northwestern" one more time with the sound reverberating throughout
> > > Ryan Field this year. Always nice to go out on a win.
> > >
> > > GAME BALLS
> > > * Our Seniors. Outside of the O-line and secondary, the losses to
> > > graduation shouldn't hurt NU too much next year. However, as they
> > > were being introduced, I reflected on how much this group of seniors
> > > have had to endure and how much they have meant to this program. Two
> > > years ago on Senior Day, they were celebrating with the rest as the
> > > Cats came back to beat Iowa en route to a Sun Bowl berth and a
> > > bright future. But with the tragedy of Coach Walker's death, they
> > > had to grow up and become team leaders in a hurry as juniors. There
> > > were some rough times, but two years later they were able to walk
> > > off Ryan Field with a comeback win  and bowl eligibility for their
> > > team.
> > > It's important that this group of seniors would not let NU's program
> > > slip back to the dark ages, much as they would not let NU lose this
> > > game. To single a couple out ...
> > > * Kim Thompson. Big catches. Clutch catches.
> > > Especially on third down on the winning drive. We'll have a great
> > > group of receivers back next year, but we'll still have big shoes to
> > > fill with Thompson's leadership and composure in crunch time.
> > > * Eddie Simpson. The whole defense was aggressive today - nice to
> > > see - but this senior's interception and return were a turning point
> > > in this game.
> > >
> > > THINGS TO WORK ON
> > > * Turnovers. One pick wasn't C.J.'s fault, but the other two were.
> > > They could have cost us dearly in the first half as we squandered
> > > many opportunities to blow this one open early.
> > > * No more field goals. Period. From now on, if we get it near
> > > midfield, it's four down territory.
> > > * No more fades. Ever. Until we get a  6-6 wideout.
> > > Overall the coaches did well today, but you still cringed on that
> > > fade call or IU's touchdown where NU gave no help on Hardy. Good
> > > aggression on D and excellent job remembering to run in the fourth
> > > on offense - but still a long way to go.
> > >
> > > AROUND THE LEAGUE
> > > * ILLINOIS deserves to be a top 20 team. This was not OHIO STATE
> > > losing as much as it was ILLINOIS winning.
> > > Amazing composure in keeping the ball out of OSU's hands in the
> > > fourth quarter. Sad for the Big Ten to see an extra BCS berth chance
> > > fade, but great to show folks that like the SEC, we have great depth
> > > and balance and are not as depleted as people think. Now hopefully
> > > the Cats can catch the Zookers celebrating next week and get a
> > > much-needed win to keep Sweet Sioux.
> > > * I had no idea of Mike Hart's playing or not playing, or the time
> > > left, but when I saw the updates of MICHIGAN at WISCONSIN and saw a
> > > 23-7 lead become 23-14 in the fourth quarter, all I could do was
> > > shake my head and wonder why good ole Lloyd Carr didn't go for two.
> > > Sure, there was a lot of time left, but without a lot of starters in
> > > the 4th quarter on the road, you go for two to make it a one
> > > possession game! They could have tied it instead of making it 23-21
> > > later - but still, nice win by the Badgers to defend home turf and
> > > show why they're a top 25 team  as well.
> > > * PENN STATE had a snoozer this week, but will definitely need some
> > > style points next week in what should be a wild race for the Florida
> > > New Year's bowls between the Illini, Badgers, Nits and OSU/UM loser.
> > > With only one BCS berth, the non-January bowls with Big Ten ties are
> > > going to get some big-name teams.
> > > * Was MICHIGAN STATE's win against PURDUE a cathartic showing that
> > > they were finally not the old Sparty team that folds like a
> > > lawnchair in November? Or was it just Purdue's overrated self
> > > catching up to it? We'll see next week. But you know that the Motor
> > > City Bowl will be wearing a lot of green next week.
> > > * Keep the pig! IOWA quietly has turned around its season nicely and
> > > should win next week to get to 7 wins and a bowl berth.
> > >
> > > Always good to end with a win. While we'll be kicking ourselves for
> > > weeks against the ones that got away against Duke, Iowa and even
> > > Purdue and Michigan, overall this has been a solid season. Coach
> > > Fitz has started to leave more of his imprint on the team and
> > > hopefully that continues with a more aggressive defense (and a new
> > > DC?) next year. And McGee is starting to learn how to best use the
> > > weapons he has on offense and that will continue to be a lot next
> > > year, especially if Brewer returns healthy. I smell a whole gadget
> > > play section of the playbook!
> > >
> > > Like I said with the seniors, it's important to realize that they
> > > helped hold this team together through some tough times in the past
> > > two years and after a year of transition last year, we're back to
> > > where we need to be this year - in the mix for bowl contention. Next
> > > year we need to build of that success and finish those victories off
> > > to get to 8, 9 or 10 wins consistently. With a  few changes on the
> > > assistant staff, I think we're heading in that direction.
> > >
> > > Also of note is that Fitz is now halfway to Walker's mark of beating
> > > all of the Big Ten teams. He now has victories over Minnesota, Iowa,
> > > Illinois, Indiana and MSU. Of course, those last five look to be a
> > > bit tougher and whether or not he gets them will really show whether
> > > or not he's taken the Cats to that next level during his coaching
> > > career.
> > >
> > > So good finish to the home season - now let's finish it out on the
> > > road. The Illini will hopefully be looking ahead to a possible
> > > Zooker Bowl in Orlando against Florida and celebrating their huge
> > > win. It will be tough to contain Juice Williams and Mendenhall
> > > without the turnovers the Illini had at the start of the year. But
> > > it is a rivalry game, so throw those records out, strap on the pads
> > > and let's go hit someone. We play our in-state rival for a bowl
> > > berth on the last weekend of the year - can you ask for much more?
> > >
> > > GO CATS!!!
> > > -SjT
> > >
> > > * * * * * * * * *
> > > STEPHEN J. TRUOG
> > > sjtruog at yahoo.com
> > > GO CATS!!!
> > >
> > > __________________________________________________
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> > >
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> >
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>
>
> --
> Jonathan W. Hodges
> 1237 Emerson St Apt 2
> Evanston, IL  60201-3577
> (847) 736-2449
> jonathanwhodges at gmail.com
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