COACH FERENTZ: Two out of the
three guys not available for interviews are academic All-Americans. I
guess they're going to class, so that's a good thing.
To
start out, I think we're in pretty decent shape for the ballgame, came out
pretty injury-free Saturday, which was a positive. Paul Chaney still will
not be available, don't see him playing this week, but I think he's getting
closer. Dace Richardson worked on Sunday, and he should be back working
full speed this week. So we'll see how he comes along here. But
hopefully we'll get him back in the mix.
Just on a down note, Alex Kanellis looks like at this point he's going to
end his career. He's had some problems with concussions and headaches,
migraine headaches, and he's been through a gauntlet of people examining him and
getting advice, that type of thing, and I think he is pretty much at ease with
his decision, reached that decision with his family last week. We spoke
about that.
Obviously we're sorry to see that happen. It's really, I think, the
worst thing you deal with in football. Injuries are part of the game
certainly. You hate to see anybody get hurt, and you certainly hate to see
a player end his career prior to when was anticipated. So it's a tough
situation, one we just feel badly about, feel badly for Alex. I know he
had high expectations and was doing a great job.
And
then on a positive note, though, he thinks he has an interest in staying with
the program and helping out. It's certainly not mandatory, but I think
he's enthused about that. We’ve had guys like Alex Wilcox, Vernon Jackson
helping out on the field a little bit, and Alex Wilcox has done a great job both
in strength and conditioning and coaching, so we're looking forward to having
Alex join us and make some real positive contributions on that front.
Just real quickly, last week, again, I just want to express my
appreciation to our fans first and foremost for turning out the way they did in
Chicago. It was a great environment for us to play in. Certainly I
think the whole trip went well. Even the traffic getting out of there
wasn't too bad on Saturday.
But
I think overall the team handled the trip pretty well. It was our first
road game, and I thought they handled the logistics pretty well, kept their
focus and did a good job during the game. Happy about that.
Now
we moved on and have turned our attention towards Syracuse. First of all,
it'll be good to play at home. I think one thing about this day and age,
there are no set routine games anymore. The 11:00 o'clock kickoffs
appeared to be for a while, but now it's 11:00 o'clock, 2:30, 3:30, 7:00
o'clock, whatever it may be, but we'll have to deal with that a little bit, but
I don't think that'll be a big deal. It'll be a great environment, good to
get back in Kinnick and start the season at home certainly.
And
then we face a team that we expect a real tough contest from. All we have
to do is look back to last year's game against Syracuse, and that's pretty much
what we expect again. Tough ball club, they played extremely hard against
us and gave us more than we wanted, and we were very fortunate to get out of
there with a win. We had to play extremely well, particularly at the end,
and I would expect the same thing this week.
We're going to have to do a good job against Syracuse, and then the other
part of our attention has to be on ourselves. Probably the most important
thing is that we show marked improvement this week, and that's really the
process we'll begin today. So we have a lot of things we need to clean up,
and that's kind of the challenge ahead of us, doing that, and then getting ready
for an opponent.
Q. You talked about the things you need to clean up. Last
Saturday you ran the ball and you were able to stop the run. How promising
is that for you as things progress?
COACH FERENTZ: If we can continue that all season long it will help
us, do that and not turn the ball over and get some takeaways. Those four
things right there, four statistics I guess you should say, takeaway, ball
security and run, stop the run, those are pretty fundamental to winning, at
least for the way we play. So that was a positive, and if we can continue
along those lines it'll be great.
Q. A lot of coaches say that the most improvement on a team
comes after the first game and before the second game. Do you agree with
that? And what type of things do you want to see improve this
week?
COACH FERENTZ: Typically it is. This is a week big for
everybody in college football. You know, I look at us, too, I think this
is a big month. We really need to make a lot of strides the next few weeks
if we're going to have a chance to be a good football team.
As
far as places to start, I think first thing that comes to my mind would be
penalties. I think we had ten penalties and six of them were on special
teams. It's kind of hard to be a good special teams unit if you get
penalized, and that's an area where they tend to pop up a lot, illegal blocks,
things of that nature. We've talked about that and had good film to look
at. That's on the down side.
The
plus side would be we thought our effort was pretty good on special teams
overall and saw some things there that would tell us that we can become pretty
solid if we can eliminate the loose ends.
First and foremost, I'd say the penalty reduction would be real
paramount.
Q. Did Jordan have anything to say afterwards? He just had
so much adrenaline running through him.
COACH FERENTZ: It was a little -- I hate to say you could see it
coming, but you could see it coming. I guess the good news is he is fast
because he got there way before the ball, and that's the good news. But
the bad news is, yeah, I thought he stumbled, and the film showed it, but he
stumbled a little bit, which took away from his ability maybe to pull off.
And
probably the worst thing about the whole thing, it ruined him for the rest of
the day. He was afraid to really cut it loose the rest of the way.
He's going to be fine. He's got a good attitude and I thought he showed
some good things. That was one of many first-time playing or first-game
mistakes, and we had a handful of those. I think for the most part we
responded from them. But that one threw Jordan off a little bit the rest
of the way.
Q. After looking at the film, how about Christensen's playing
the offensive line?
COACH FERENTZ: Just kind of like what we thought with Jake, there
are some throws probably he wishes he had made or some decisions he'd probably
like to change. Certainly the drops didn't help his statistics, and that
would have changed some things there.
We
talked about penalties. I think we lost a 40-plus yard gain rush, which
would have probably given us some points there, too. I can't remember if
we scored or not. But anyway, it was a nice gain and a big play in the run
game that came back on a hold.
But
I think all in all, Jake's play was pretty good. I liked his demeanor out
there. I think we all felt comfortable with that. I think he was
aware of things and responded -- any adverse conditions, he responded favorably
there.
And
then the line I think for the most part did a good job. They played hard,
made some errors, there are some things in there that have to get cleaned up and
little things, but really nobody just -- like setting a guy free and letting him
come through, which I kind of thought might happen, at least a time or two, and
fortunately nobody got hurt out there, because you turn guys free, that can
happen.
I
think there are a lot of positives and a lot of things that we can build off
of. I liked their effort overall.
Q. Pretty good?
COACH FERENTZ: For the most part it was pretty good. Pretty
firm inside there and pretty good job on the edge. We got beat a time or
two there. But for a first time out, I thought it was a good start and
certainly one we can build off and a great teaching tape.
Q. Do you take special pride in the line because a lot of it
seems like you created a camp competition and then helped the other --
there was a real competition this year.
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, it really was. It was that way in the
spring, too. As you know, we moved a lot of guys around, and we're still
doing that. It's not over. Dace will be back in the mix here at some
point, the next two weeks hopefully, and the other guys are improving.
They only played two plays, that second group, but they did a good job when they
were in there. They've been doing some good things at practice. I
think it's a close competition. We're not ready to ordain anyone as the
next John Hannah or Robert Gallery or Eric Steinbach, but it's a good healthy
group. I think they're working hard. We're hardly there yet, but
there's some signs there that we can be okay up front.
Q. What will happen when Richardson gets back?
COACH FERENTZ: Well, I don't know. That's something we'll
have to work through and just see what happens. First we've got to see him
practice, in practice on a continual basis. He's missed 30 days, and those
are big days. It's not like 30 days in the fall where really you're
working hard two days a week. But camp every day -- not every day but
most of them were pretty heavy.
He's got a lot of catching up to do to get in game shape and what have
you and get his technique back. If it was just as easy as going out and
practicing, playing after three practices, we would have showed up last week,
the whole team would have showed up. Everybody would have been a lot
fresher. All that being said, when he gets back, I know one thing, we've
never had too many good players and too many good linemen, so hopefully we'll
have that problem.
Q. Have the drops been a problem with the
receivers?
COACH FERENTZ: Not really. A year ago, yeah. A year ago
spring especially. But we've been catching the ball -- for the most
part Saturday, the things that happened that were not what we had hoped, we kind
of anticipated, I think. Outside of the drops, no, we've been catching the
ball fairly well. I'm not going to name names, but one guy that probably
hadn't been catching the ball real well consistently caught the ball real well
on Saturday, which I'll take that first any day. I think any of us would.
But
yeah, that was a little bit of a surprise, and probably concentration, probably
jitters, I don't know, but hopefully we'll work through
that.
Q. At what point will you be forced to juggle the lineup because
of drops?
COACH FERENTZ: Well, if we're doing it day after day after day or
game after game, most importantly it's what you do in the games, but typically
what you do in practice is what shows up in games, and this is an exception to
the rule. But I think the rest of the stuff we saw Saturday, you could
say, yeah, I kind of remember some days where that happened. You know, we
knew we were going to need some work there.
Q. Could you talk a little bit about the
scheduling?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, somebody said that on the phone deal a little
while ago, and I really wasn't aware of it. My response was if you had
taken a poll probably about eight years ago, you could have got pretty good odds
on that one. You know, there's not much else to say. I'm just happy
to be coaching anywhere right now. I'm really happy to be coaching
here. Yeah, I'm just happy. And the fact that I'm here just means a lot of
people have done a lot of good things over the last eight years, or else I
wouldn't be here. I'd be somewhere else.
Q. Do you like playing night games?
COACH FERENTZ: They're okay. They were great in high school
because that's what you did in high school. At least where I grew up
that's what you did. They're unusual now, but I think they're going to
become more a part of our life. So I think the more we do, the more use we
get to it.
I
think I made that comment earlier, it used to be -- certainly in the '80s
you always played at 1:00 o'clock unless you had one of those CBS games --
am I allowed to say that? I probably shouldn't be saying that. We
had a national game at 3:30 or whatever time those were, around 3:00 o'clock,
4:00 o'clock. But anyway, you'd have one of those; otherwise it was 1:00
o'clock and then 11:00 o'clock seemed unusual. And now it's a little bit
of everything. The last couple years have been that way, and I think we're
going to see more of that.
The
environment is great. It's nice, and if it's hot it's even better because
there's no sun out there, and if it's home it's even better because you have a
short ride home. But when they're on the road, it makes for a long night
with a short morning.
Q. What do you remember from last year's night game
atmosphere-wise?
COACH FERENTZ: It was unbelievable. It was just absolutely
unbelievable. It was great. There are a lot of great Kinnick
moments, but that was one of them, at least that opening part. You know,
there's something special about -- certainly when you play at our place,
the electricity there is pretty good. So that's fun.
Q. Did you learn anything from that game against Ohio State that
you maybe feel you could use as far as preparing differently for this night game
against Syracuse?
COACH FERENTZ: I thought we were ready to play last year.
That wasn't an issue. Turning the ball over didn't help us. That was
a huge issue for us.
But
no, I thought we were ready to play. I thought we had good preparation all
week and that day. I thought from kickoff our team was ready to
play. I thought we played hard, just didn't play well enough, but we
played hard. That's not one of those games I look back and say, ooh, boy,
we stunk. I don't look at it that way. We didn't play well enough,
but we played hard.
Q. Have you paid attention at all to the media coverage of the
Big Ten Network negotiations?
COACH FERENTZ: Not really, no. I think there's stuff on my
desk and I scan it and throw it out. With all due respect, I've got other
things I'm a lot more worried about right now, like our
team.
Q. Regarding the fans, there's a lot of people pulling their
hair out right now.
COACH FERENTZ: I empathize with our fans first and foremost, and I
think all of us -- we want every game, be it football, basketball, any
sport to be accessible to our fans. If they can't make it here to see a
game live, then we want them to be able to see it on TV. I think we'll get
there, but I'm no expert in this field and don't pretend to be. I think
that's a big driving force behind the Big Ten Network is more exposure in sports
and also more exposure for the University. I think those are the pluses.
I'm
no business expert, but it seems like any time you do a new venture it's always
going to be a little bumpy at the front end. I've got a lot of respect for
Jim Delany. I think he's a pretty sharp guy. I can't imagine we'd be
going down this road if he didn't have good reason to think it was going to be
successful. I certainly have no reason to think it's not going to be a
good thing. But we're going to go through some bumps, I know that, and I
hope they're not too many.
Q. A lot of these players were taken off the depth chart this
week, freshmen on the defense, secondary, other positions.
COACH FERENTZ: Just to clean it up, there's no significance
here. Things haven't changed an awful lot. With our thinking, we
played four freshmen playing Saturday and we still have 12 in the picture, maybe
three or four of those on the back burner, but we'll keep the team alive and
just see what happens. You can't predict the future as far as injuries or
how guys develop or don't develop and that type of thing, so no major changes
there.
Q. You didn't play any backup quarterbacks Saturday. Is
that an area that you'd like to get some experience in?
COACH FERENTZ: In a perfect world, yeah, you'd love to have that
opportunity. But I don't think any of us were feeling too sure about
anything really until the end there. We ran the second line in a couple
snaps left, but it was one of those days where we thought it would be a
four-quarter ballgame and it was.
It's probably better that way anyway because we really had to earn
it. We had to work hard and plays were critical out there, so it was good
for our younger guys especially to be involved in that kind of situation and
have to deal with that because we're going to have a lot of those this
year. I think we expect those week in and week out.
Q. That was kind of a question mark going into the game.
How did Harold and the secondary do?
COACH FERENTZ: I thought they did a pretty good job overall.
Harold had to come out for a little bit, but I thought all three guys that
played played well and did some good things, and I thought the younger guys,
Greenwood and Tillison, both did a good job on special teams, which was good,
too. We were really hoping -- it's the first time either one of those
guys had played, so we were hoping to mature them a little bit on the special
teams end of it all.
Q. The clock is running on Brian Bulaga. Do you see a
similar break-in period like with Dace and Gates years ago?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, I mean, I guess I've got to think back on
that. You mean rotate?
Q. Yeah.
COACH FERENTZ: We'll see how it goes, yeah, we'll rotate those
guys. We'll see how it goes. He's playing a little bit of guard, a
little bit of tackle. He had an injury that kept him out for about a week,
but he's made good progress and we definitely think he's in the thick of
it. Chances are we're going to need more than five guys, that's for sure,
during the fall.
Q. Back to Alex, how long was he dealing with those
headaches? And the decision, was that something recommended to him by
doctors, or is that something where he realized that he just wasn't able
to --
COACH FERENTZ: It's been ongoing. He had a concussion in the
spring and had an episode early in camp. He's seen a lot of different
specialists, and as you know, this is a kind of a new area, if you will, the
study of this injury. So yeah, he's spoken to several different doctors in
different fields, and they all -- at the end of the day, we sat
down -- I say we did, the medical staff, sat down with Alex and his folks,
and everybody had their input, and that was the conclusion they came up
with. It's just the best thing to do at this point right now is him to
pull out.
It's not like a broken arm or something like that where you -- or a
broken finger that you can live with. You don't want to do any damage
obviously to your mind. I think it's a decision we totally support, and I
just don't think you mess around there. I think it's true with any player,
you always think about what's best for their long-term health, but again, you're
talking about a head area, that's a whole different deal.
But
even with joints, I mean, who wants to be crippled when they're 50 if they don't
have to be, so that's always something to think about. You could end up
with a limb replacement or joint replacement.
Q. In the spring and the fall several guys talked about the need
to bring fire and intensity back to this team. Do you feel like you're
seeing that so far?
COACH FERENTZ: I thought we played hard. I thought our older
guys, our most experienced guys, we were hoping they would give us great
leadership out there and play like the experienced guys, and they did
that. I made the comment earlier, this has been a fun group to be
around. Really since January they've worked hard in every phase, they've
done a good job. But the proof is in the pudding, and this is where the
rubber hits the road right now in the fall, so we've got one down, 11 to go, and
we'll see how well we run the race. So far, one for one, that's a good
start.
Q. Did you see any of Syracuse's game on Friday
night?
COACH FERENTZ: Just a little bit. It's hard to -- we had
meetings going on. I have a hard time cross-scouting. I'm not a good
multitask guy. I've said that before. I can't scout people in the
shower and stuff like that, what have you. I watched it a little bit, but
it was hard to pay attention.
The
one thing that jumped out, it looked like they were emotionally ready to
go. It looked like they were fired up and ready to go. I saw a
little bit of the start.
Q. They gave up 300 yards rushing. Is that
something you guys --
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, we've seen the film. Washington's
quarterback is a pretty impressive guy, 6'4", he's a big guy that can run.
He's one of those guys.
It's hard for us to really -- there's not a lot we get out of that
whole thing. That running back played pretty well, too. But we're
kind of dissimilar as far as the way we're built. It's not a great film
for us that way.
Q. The quarterback did complete passes to ten different
receivers, though. Did that worry you, the way he was able to make short
passes this week?
COACH FERENTZ: I think people are going to try to throw the ball
against us, we know that, and that's going to happen all year long. As
long as we're not giving up the big ones, we'll survive. We'll give up the
short stuff. But if they start throwing over our heads, which Northern
Illinois hit one on us, that's not a good thing. The big plays are the
things we want to try to be able to control.
Q. I'll try to keep a straight face when I ask this. Is
there any difference between catching a ball thrown by a left-handed quarterback
and a right-handed quarterback?
COACH FERENTZ: I don't think so. Somebody brought that up
Saturday. If that was the problem, you'd think it would have shown up like
a year ago when Jake got here. We've been catching the ball well in
practice, and I just think it was a concentration thing probably. We just
have to do a little bit better job.
Q. You're left-handed, right?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, I can't throw too well, though. I can't
throw a football.
Q. Captains for this week?
COACH FERENTZ: I'm sorry, yeah. I left that out. Our
captains this week are our two running backs Albert Young, Damian Sims; Mike
Klinkenborg defensively; and then Charles Godfrey, defense/special teams, did a
great job on both areas.
Q. In terms of preparation, do you think that it's vital that
you played the game last year so your players have kind of recollection of what
happened when you played the team rather than just look strictly at the game
film and the stats?
COACH FERENTZ: It helps, I think. Any time you have some
familiarity with an opponent, that's a good thing. It helped us with
Northern Illinois, and Syracuse is the same way, and then we'll have to go down
a different path when we play Michigan State and Penn State. We haven't
seen those guys in a couple years. I think you lose your feel, if you
will, for it.
I
think the one thing we need to be cognizant of is that we had a very tough game
with these guys last year, and that was the comment -- an observation I
made last year when we played them because their record wasn't particularly
great two years ago, but they played tough against some good people. I
think it was Notre Dame, I think Louisville, and just got done looking at the
Louisville game this morning from last year, and they played Louisville tough
last year. So we have to expect a tough ballgame. We're probably
going to be up for about 12 of those. That's our mindset. We need to
be ready to go.
Q. Perception, the kids just look at 42-12, the stats that were
there, and then last year was a double overtime game, what they did to us last
year versus the other day?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, that's a fine line. We saw that this
past Saturday around the country. These guys played Wake Forest off their
feet a year ago, the week before we played them. At that time, okay, so
what, Wake Forest, big deal, but Wake Forest ends up in the Orange Bowl.
You never know in September really what's what and who's who. We found out
at the end of the day.
I
guess I would offer this up, Syracuse played the heck out of them, they played
the heck out of us. They weren't that far away last year from getting over
the hump, and my guess is that's their goal right now. There's no better
way than to come in here and beat us.
We
need to be ready to battle here. This is going to be a tough
ballgame. We need to have that mindset. Hopefully we learned that
last year. That's just going to be the nature of our team. We'll be
in for good games every weekend.
Q. Do you anticipate a change in the league with Boise State's
win over Oklahoma, Youngstown State's win against Michigan, there are a lot of
football players out there now that could be overlooked?
COACH FERENTZ: There really are. The 85 scholarship limit I
think has changed the geography. There are certain teams that are still
loaded, and it's always going to be that way. But I think that number is
probably under ten right now. Everybody else has an opportunity.
To
me, the bottom line, just what I said, our team needs to realize that.
It's a good thing, but it's a bad thing if you don't take it in the right way,
and you need to realize anybody is capable of doing good things on
Saturday. The best thing you can do is play your best and try to eliminate
any problems. We didn't always do that last year.
Q. Can a position can be won or lost in practice this
week?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, I mean, it could be. If one of the
contestants just flat-out shanked every ball. But we're going to work our
way through it. I think that's the approach we're going to take. You
know, you can do two things; you can have a big meeting and just dissect it and
analyze it and do all that stuff and waste a lot of time or go out and work on
it, and that's our plan. We're just going to go out and work on it and see
if we can't get better and hopefully we'll be better this Saturday and better
the next Saturday after that and keep pushing for it.
Q. Do you remember that goal line stand last year at the end of
the Syracuse game?
COACH FERENTZ: It was long, like the longest ever. I've never
seen anything or experienced anything like that, and I doubt I ever will
again. I think most of us can say that. It was a totally unusual
situation. Both teams were competing extremely hard at that point, and I
think you've got to give our defense an awful lot of credit. To hold up
like that was phenomenal. The last couple plays, just outstanding.
The
snapshot moment there was Mike coming over and everybody else doing their jobs
and Klink coming in and cleaning the thing up. It was a great play.
Your mind runs a gamut of thoughts during that whole
situation.
Q. (Inaudible) this year in the match-up?
COACH FERENTZ: I hope so, but I hope also it serves as a reminder
how it was tough to get out of that with a victory. We had to fight and
scrap for what we got that day, and it was just a tough ballgame. We need
to be ready for that kind of game again.
Q. What you talked about with turnovers, maybe it was four or
five that game --
COACH FERENTZ: We had a few of them.
Q. Is that pretty much what you're talking about this
year?
COACH FERENTZ: In my mind if you look at statistics, the last eight
years here, you know, and it's pretty much true, but it is true for us, if we do
a good job with turnovers, takeaways and turnovers, it's a two-headed dragon
there, the odds of us having a good team go up with us having success on the
field.
Some teams, I don't want to mention it, but there was a champion in our
conference recently that didn't do a great job with turnovers, but they still
won the league. If you've got that much talent and that much going for
you, sometimes you can be sloppy. But for us typically, and I'll go back
to 2002, I think we were plus 15 or 13. And Ohio State was kind of -- they
won the championship that year.
The
way we'd have to win one if we ever won one where you just do everything right
each week, and they were right there with us or equal to us. In close ball
games, things like that, which we're apt to be in close games, that's a big
factor, ball security and takeaways are big.
Q. There was a part Saturday in the game where Northern Illinois
started on your 40-yard line in comparison to 2004. Do you see any
similarities between the defensive line this year and back in
2004?
COACH FERENTZ: Yeah, just trying to think about that Wisconsin game
where we started in the hole two times in row. It wasn't near as bad as
Saturday. We were way in the hole in that game. They came out with
three.
That's the nice thing about having defensive play; it gives you a chance
to overcome some mistakes, turnovers or in the kicking game, that type of thing.
But
all that being said, we'd rather have the other team have to go 80 and see what
they can do. But as far as comparisons, it's way too early. But we
have some veterans at least. We're veteran up front like we were that
year, and hopefully that can be a good formula for us.