COACH
FERENTZ: A lot of things happened today that we haven't seen a
while. Seems like it's been 30 years, three years I guess since
we blocked a punt, and that was good, too, so there was a lot of positives
today.
Q.
How important was Shonn Greene's touchdown run after they had cut it
to 14-9 and then he goes 52 yards. How important?
COACH
FERENTZ: We certainly knew at halftime there would be nothing
easy about this football game. We lost our momentum certainly
in that first part of the second half and they were gaining it.
Shonn has been giving us a spark all season long. The guy just --
obviously the statistics speak for themselves. I've been saying
all along his yards per carry I think is extremely impressive.
It
just gets back to the way he plays. He's very determined, he's
very tough-minded, and he's a guy that can spark a football team and
some pretty good execution up front, too, so it's a good combination.
Q.
It looked like a lot of your wide receivers like Andy Brodell took what
would normally be a 15-yard play and turned it into --
COACH
FERENTZ: That's usually the difference on a big run. It
takes good blocking on the perimeter, and I think Andy has been doing
a good job, certainly Derrell has been doing some good things out there
on that front, and even on the screen pass that we scored on, Myers
came over and did a good job. That's kind of been representative
of this team. They've been hustling, trying to help each other
out, and the guys up front have been getting Shonn up to the second
level, and he's doing some things on his own and then other guys are
trying to chip in, too. When a guy like him has the ball I think
everybody is a little bit more enthusiastic because they know that effort
is going to pay off.
Q.
We knew he could run over people, but are you surprised to see him run
away from people?
COACH
FERENTZ: Not really. I think that's one thing. He's
a big back and he's a tough-minded back, but he also has got pretty good
speed, and he always has had good speed. That's one of the thing
you get kind of fixated on is his tough running. You forget he
can pick them up and go pretty well.
As
I said, he's a good story. He's a good story. He's come
the hard road.
Q.
Andy Kuempel stepped in?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yeah, all season long we've had guys step in and do the
job when something happens, and Andy is a guy who did a nice job last
spring, kind of tailed off in camp and was lost in the shuffle a little
bit, and I thought he really started to rebound the Northwestern week,
and he's been climbing ever since.
He
and Rafael rotated at that guard spot, and you hate to lose anybody,
you hate to lose a senior like Seth Olsen who's not only a good player
but a leader, but sometimes that happens. That's when other guys
carried the slack, grabbed the rope and jumped in there and done a great
job. You've got Andy on one side, you've got Chad Geary on the
other side doing the same thing, doing a nice job for Clayborn.
Guys have been pitching in and doing their share.
Q.
What is the diagnosis on Seth Olsen? What happened?
COACH
FERENTZ: Seth rolled his ankle Wednesday, non-contact. It
was just a blocking drill like we do every week frequently, and just
one of those freak things. I'm hoping he can make it back, but
it's probably going to be a while. We'll see how next week looks.
Q.
Talk about Paki coming back from his three weeks off and not just playing
but having an impact play.
COACH
FERENTZ: That was huge. To block a punt is a great thing,
and ironically we went for the block the play before. I'm still
not sure what the penalty situation was, but anyway, they had to repunt
it, and we put the return on it, and sure enough, we got the block.
It was just a great effort. Matt Melloy (phon.) got his in the
Outback Bowl a couple years back. It was on a return but a great
individual effort, and it was great to see. It was a great spark.
Q.
What does Rob Bruggeman bring to this team?
COACH
FERENTZ: You know, the guy, he's just a heck of a player.
He's a heck of a player. You know, the center position is usually
a good guy, and Rob fits that bill. He's a very intelligent player,
walked on obviously as you know. You know the story better than
I.
But
he's worked for everything he's gotten. He really was, I thought,
ascending a year ago spring. He was really having a good spring.
You know, went through some tough times there, but boom, he's jumped
in this year and really done a good job.
I
doubt anybody is enjoying their senior year any more than he is.
It's really fun to see.
Q.
Is this bye week coming at a bad time?
COACH
FERENTZ: No, it's at a perfect time. We don't have much
left right now, and we've been kind of putting that out in front of
our guys. Schedule makers make the schedule, but we had a eight-week
block, and we'll catch our breath right now. We've got guys nicked
up, so it will give us a chance to get rested up here a little bit.
You
know, we'll do a little preparation on our next four teams and we'll
go back to work, but I think it's a perfect thing. Now we've got
a four-week season. That's what it comes down to. We've got
a four-week season.
Q.
After the three tough close losses, (inaudible)?
COACH
FERENTZ: It's just something we thought we might. It's been
a while since we've done that play or run that play, but we thought
it might have a chance, mainly because of something they were doing
defensively, and it worked out. Sometimes they work, sometimes
they don't. Just for the record, Ken O'Keefe put the play in and
made the call, if anybody is interested.
I've
got bad news, too, those guys -- I was going to put the coordinators out
in front of you on Friday, but I gave them the day off, so we'll get
them in the out of season. Just joking.
Q.
The safety blitz, Shonn's run on that, the draw play there, was that
called or was that --
COACH
FERENTZ: No, it was called. They disguised the blitz pretty
well, and I'd really note Brandon Myers on that play. He did a
nice job of double-bumping basically, which gave Shonn a chance to spring
it. Then Brandon had a great play out there in the open on Reisner's
touchdown, too. Efforts like that, that's what it takes to win
football games. That's a heady senior player doing a nice job.
Q.
After the three tough losses, this thing could have gone either way.
Why is it going the way it is?
COACH
FERENTZ: We've got good players. When I say good players,
they're good people. They've been so consistent, and you go back
to spring ball right on through. We weren't very good in the spring
as a football team. We couldn't have beaten St. Mary's, I don't
think, if we had played them, but the guys have been working hard.
They've had a good attitude each and every day, and that's all you can
ask. When guys do that, they tend to improve, and that's what
we've seen.
You
know, even during those three losses, if you look close, nobody likes
losing, but we were fighting for the full 60. Guys were responding
to whatever bad things might have happened. They were responding
in a positive way. And the bottom line is we weren't good enough
to win those three games. We're not looking back, we're looking
forward, and it's just been a fun team to coach. I've been saying
that. We've got a great staff.
Q.
Those three games, there were questions about whether or not this team
could finish, they were having trouble finishing.
COACH
FERENTZ: Who's asking that? I didn't hear that (laughter).
There
were a lot of questions, I think. Questions come with losing,
and unfortunately when you win, everything is fine. It's not usually
all fine, either, but that's just how it goes.
To
me, I go back to 2002 when we lost right here in Kinnick early in the
season. We weren't good enough to win that game that night.
I don't stay up at night worrying about those kinds of things.
If we're not good enough, we're not good enough, and what you worry
about, you stay up at night worrying about how can we get better, how
can we correct those situations and address them, and that's kind of
been our mode of operation. I think our players operate the same
way.
Q.
You guys were on the cusp of putting out the effort that you say were
shown on the scoreboard the last couple weeks. Did you feel like
you were pretty close as a team of just putting it all together, just
a couple of turnovers?
COACH
FERENTZ: I did. You just hit on a real key point.
When you don't protect the football -- especially the way we play, if you
don't protect the football, it makes it tough for you to win and your
chances really go down, are minimized.
You
look at the last two weeks, we didn't turn it over, and the results
have been an awful lot better. Even when we did turn it over,
our defense I thought really did a good job as a rule responding because
we've turned it over on our end and they've gone out there and held
our opponents to field goals.
When
you're seeing those kinds of responses out of the team, just gives you
some hope that things are going to work out here. I'm not taking
it for granted, but I thought as we got a little bit more experienced
we'd be a little bit better protecting the football, and that's two
down. We've got four to go.
Q.
What do you do to improve the 3rd down conversion rate?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yeah, one of them was the 3rd and short right there at
the start of the half, and that was a good adjustment by their team.
They made a nice -- they had a good call for what we did, and it's unfortunate.
We're going to keep working on it, just like everything else.
We'll get there.
Q.
Talk about Pat Angerer's game today.
COACH
FERENTZ: Pat has been playing very well. Today was a little
bit more evident with the amount of tackles and the interceptions.
But another guy who's really -- he's battled, he's gone through adversity,
and he's really just stuck to his core values, I guess. And we
saw him getting better in the spring, and right now he's playing with
great confidence.
He's
also a versatile guy. He's a smart guy. He played two positions
today, and that's a real credit to him, too, because he's prepared.
He's really worked hard and prepared.
Q.
Did you think that Reisner was a potential playmaker?
COACH
FERENTZ: Well, yeah, we sure thought he was a good prospect, and
we saw some things last year that were -- where he had potential.
But as I said before, he looked like he was about 16 years old, maybe
15 last year, and he's really grown immensely. Even though he
only played a little bit last year, he's really made huge strides.
When we get Tony back, which I think we're pretty close there, it really
gives us a one, two, three punch. But Allen is making progress.
He works hard and we're thrilled he's on our team.
Q.
Did you have a decent view of his touchdown play?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yeah, good enough. Good enough. It was a
real nice effort. And again, Brandon jumped in there and helped
out, too. This guy has got some skills, he really does.
Q.
He said you're looking forward now. What do you think the future
holds for this team?
COACH
FERENTZ: We'll find out, but the good news is right now we're
giving ourselves a chance, and that's something maybe we weren't doing
a couple weeks ago. It's a learning process sometimes, but I think
the guys are getting a little bit more confident now. It's something
you can't just hand over. That's something that gets earned.
So they're starting to believe in themselves a little bit.
Now
the challenge for us is to really keep our focus where it needs to be
and accept the challenge of getting ready for our next game. Whenever
that time comes, we have to get our focus on that next opponent.