COACH
FERENTZ: Just a couple quick notes. Captains this week will
be the same four that we've had the last several weeks, Mitch King and
Matt Kroul on the defensive side, then Shonn Greene and Rob Bruggeman
on offense, Those guys have done a great job and they'll lead
the team this week.
Injury-wise,
we're doing fairly well. Probably the two iffiest guys are Tony
Moeaki and Seth Olsen. We'll see how the week goes. Tony
is scheduled to practice today on a limited basis, so we'll take that
day by day and see what goes on there. Seth is scheduled to go
tomorrow. We'll see how that goes. I'm not quite as optimistic
there, so we'll play that by ear.
The
bye week was good, gave everybody a chance to rest a little bit.
Some of the joints that were sore, that type of thing, had a chance
to heal up, and I think we're doing okay there, and hopefully we had
a good week. We'll know more here at the end of this week.
But it went pretty well for the most part. We're anxious to turn
our sights, get back into a game week routine, and certainly we'll have
our hands full this week, playing a very talented, very explosive Illinois
football team.
They're
very talented on both sides of the ball and special teams and a very
capable team. That's one front. And then the other front
is making sure we're ready to go, and those are really the two things
on our plate right now, and we'll go from there.
Q.
What do you think the reason is that you guys
were able to handle the Illini so well in the past five meetings?
COACH
FERENTZ: I don't know how well they've been. Most recent
memory, not many of them have been easy, I know that, going back to
2004. That was a tough game, a real windy game, and hard-fought.
Certainly last year it took everything we could muster to eke out a
win.
I
know going back there a couple years ago, Alex Kanellis having an appendicitis
attack and that game being a real tough, hard game, too, and that was
back when they were just getting started, but even then it was a tough
ballgame. I think we're probably looking at more of the same this
week. It will be a hard-fought game.
Q.
The last two performances, it seems a lot of fans out there are actually
kind of getting ahead of themselves, looking at how well you played
against Florida and stuff. Are you similarly optimistic that your
team is maybe a lot better than you thought at the beginning of the
year?
COACH
FERENTZ: Geez, people getting ahead of themselves? Really?
Is that the opposite of everybody doom-and-glooming it? Those two
things happen. Usually if you lose a couple games, everything
is terrible and the sky is falling, and when you win a couple, everything
is great. Let's book those reservations now.
I
think everybody realizes it's a long season. You're playing eight
conference games, and anything can happen. That's why you play
the whole schedule out, and I hope our team realizes that everything
that's in front of us right now is going to be tough. We felt
that way really the last ten games of our schedule; we thought each
game would be contested pretty closely. That's really how that's
panned out, and I expect more of the same. Reactions either good
or bad, those things come with whatever the outcomes may be on the field.
But
the reality is we've got four tough games ahead of us, and the only
one that really matters right now is the one that we're going to play
this Saturday.
Q.
Do fans have -- has the perspective fans have, or everybody, changed in
the last ten years where if you win you're going to the Rose Bowl; if
you lose, fire everybody, more so maybe than when you started here?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yes, I think that's fair to say. I think everybody
has always had opinions. That's why people are drawn to sports.
I think just the way they voice them and the manner in which they get
voiced and the magnitude at which they get voiced has probably changed.
It used to be go down to your neighborhood gathering spot or the coffee
house in the morning, what have you, and talk, and now a lot more of
it is by the internet and a little bit more national than it used to
be.
Probably
with the broader the scope, maybe a little bit less accuracy at times.
I think that's fair to say. And things are more extreme now.
But
that's the world we live in, and it could be worse. We could be
in politics, I guess. It could be a lot worse.
I
voted the other day, by the way. Do you want to know what I did
on my bye week? I voted Saturday, being a good American.
Just being a patriot, that's all.
I
encourage everybody else to do the same. I'm sure all of you will.
That's what makes our country great, one of the things that makes it
great. I'm not running for office, either, I promise you that.
Q.
You saw a lot of football over the weekend, I'm sure. What's produced
all of this scoring?
COACH
FERENTZ: Poor defense, I guess. I don't know. But
it's a mix. There's some really good quarterback play out there.
But it is a good question, because boy, I can't remember this many points
being put up. Particularly in the Big 12 last week, some real
explosive offensive football teams. I guess it's a good thing
we're not playing some of those teams.
But
we're looking at a team right now that's averaging 460-whatever a game
right now and about 35 points, 34 points a game.
Maybe
I guess we're seeing more quarterbacks that are a little bit more prolific
throwing the football. That seems to be the common denominator.
Q.
One year ago Juice Williams starting missed something like 19 of 20
passes, now he's leading the Big Ten in total offense. When you
see tape, what's been the biggest thing that he's improved on?
COACH
FERENTZ: I think that's been experience. The first time
we saw him, you saw the talent out there. That was at their place,
I believe. You could see the talent. But it's playing quarterback
stuff, just playing any position stuff. Certainly at quarterback
position there's a lot to learn, and he's the centerpiece. The
quarterback is the centerpiece of any offense, so it's a process, a
never-ending process. But he's matured, and he's a lot more experienced
now, and he's certainly a confident player. That's a great attribute
to have.
Q.
We're about two thirds of the way into the season, and Shonn is putting
up numbers just about as good as any back in the country. Do you
think he should be getting a little bit more attention nationally in
Heisman watches and things like that? It doesn't seem like that's
happening. I'm wondering what your thoughts on that are.
COACH
FERENTZ: It seems like those things all work out for themselves.
We still have four games remaining. Somewhere in the last ten
days I saw that he made a midseason All-American team, which is probably
better than being on a preseason All-American team, but really the idea
is to be on a final postseason All-American team.
But
I don't think that's his goal when he plays. He's just out there
trying to be as good a football player as he can be and help our team,
and his attitude has been outstanding. Anyone who has seen him
play knows that the numbers speak for themselves, and anybody that's
seen him play would be even more enthusiastic with the way he is playing.
That
being said, we have four tough games ahead. He knows that, our
whole team knows that, and if he truly wants to be in that mix, first
of all, it depends on what the other players in the mix are doing.
And then secondly, most importantly, you as a player have to do what
you need to do to justify that kind of discussion. It just gets
down to playing well, but he's done that each and every Saturday in
eight games now.
Q.
Does Illinois's offense present the biggest challenge to your defense
so far this season?
COACH
FERENTZ: I guess that's fair to say. These guys are very,
very prolific right now, very talented, very veteran, and led by a quarterback who
has proven himself. He's a proven winner. You can look at what
he did at Michigan a couple weeks ago, set records up there in Ann Arbor
on the road, what he did last year leading that team to a victory against
Ohio State, the No. 1 team. You look at those two games are two
snapshots of what he's capable of doing, and he's going to be a great
challenge. Their whole offensive team is going to be a great challenge,
but certainly it starts at the quarterback.
Q.
The old cliché, unstoppable force versus immovable object?
COACH
FERENTZ: We'll find out. I don't know how movable we are.
They do a nice job. It's not just passing game, either.
They do a great job in the running game, excellent receivers, good backs,
line is doing a good job, so it's quite a challenge.
Q.
Talk about Jason Ford. You had him a few times you thought and
now he's at Illinois putting up some pretty good numbers.
COACH
FERENTZ: He's playing well. He's a good football player.
We thought that, and I think he's confirmed it. He's playing really
well as a true freshman.
Q.
It seems like you guys are running
an extra linebacker a lot. What's the philosophy?
COACH
FERENTZ: It's just a form of substituted defense. We've
fooled around with a package similar to it going back to Texas Tech
in 2001. I guess that's probably where it all got started.
As I've said earlier in the year, it just kind of depends on the availability
of players that we have, who fits, and we try to steer our packages
towards our best personnel, the personnel fits that we're trying to
do the best, and we've kind of found a little niche for that package
right now.
Q.
Who is coming through to make that
-- who's shining for you guys to be able to use
that defense?
COACH
FERENTZ: I mean, it's more linebacker oriented. We take
a defensive lineman out and insert another linebacker or a couple.
Lance Tillison made a nice play at the end of the ballgame two weeks
ago, so it's giving him a little bit of a roll. He's kind of an
amphibious character, if you will, so it gives him a spot.
If
you've got players available, you try to find a spot where it might
work for them and work for us.
Q.
Usually the thinking there is to get more defensive backs on the field.
You guys are going toward more linebackers. What is the thinking
there?
COACH
FERENTZ: You know, it's a big guy who plays with his hand on the
ground, trade it for a guy on his feet, and it's more three-man rush
oriented. If you're a four-man front, which we are, it gives you
another pass defender, a natural pass defender without trying to drop
a down lineman. Some people do that, or some people take a down
lineman and have him walk and roam. We just don't think that fits
with what we do.
Q.
Did you guys run a lot of this last year against Illinois? I don't
think you did.
COACH
FERENTZ: Not a lot necessarily, no.
Q.
You ran more option last year?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yes.
Q.
They try to use Ben a lot in different formations. How do you
address that?
COACH
FERENTZ: It's tough. He's a tough out. He's not only
good on offense. He's excellent on offense, running the ball,
catching the ball, excellent special teams. Ran back the kick,
I believe it was, against Penn State last year. It was a huge
play in that game, big return I think it's last week.
He's
a great football player, and he's dangerous on all parts of the field.
He'll catch the ball in the middle and has great ability to run afterwards,
too. He's a big, strong, athletic guy who's really a dangerous
performer.
Q.
Have you heard about this green-out that the fans are talking about?
COACH
FERENTZ: A little bit, yeah, a little bit. Right now my
thoughts are on Illinois, period. It's not a prominent thought,
but I'm not sure about all the details at this point. But it's
good for fan enthusiasm, it's good for us. That's how I'll look
at it.
Q.
How do you balance maybe trying to promote an athlete
-- say like a Brad Banks a few years ago. When did you maybe switch
from just letting him do it on the field to maybe giving him a boost
nationally recognition-wise?
COACH
FERENTZ: I think, again, the first and foremost is the player
has to be playing well, otherwise it's a paper campaign, if you will.
But that being said, at some point if a guy is really having a great
year, you know, you'd be remiss not to try to help him, without going
overboard or being silly.
I
mean, if Shonn keeps performing like this, first of all, anybody paying
attention to going to notice it, and I think most people have.
But again, you measure a guy's performance by the entire season, and
at the end of the day, if he plays well, he'll probably get what he
deserves to have coming for him. Where that line of demarcation
is, I'm not certain to answer that. But I thought the school did
a good job regarding Brad's campaign, and unfortunately he ran up against
a guy that was pretty good, too. You know, Carson Palmer had had
a great year, which like when Chuck Long was involved, Bo Jackson unfortunately
was right there, too.
That's
usually the case, and I guess some years it's a little bit more clear
than others, but the biggest thing is for Shonn to keep playing well.
Q.
Is there much you can do personally with this, maybe go on another national
radio show, get on ESPN and talk about it a little bit more often and
let the marketing department handle the rest?
COACH
FERENTZ: Yeah, I don't know how much that stuff really handles
the vote. I'm not trained in that area. Anybody that wants
to talk about Shonn Green, I'll be happy to talk about him. That's
a great subject. I'll be happy to talk about that. Again,
I'm not sure where it ranks in terms of importance.
Q.
Speaking of awards, the Draddy finalists were announced this week.
Matt Kroul is a semifinalist. How deserving would he be of becoming
a finalist in other words?
COACH
FERENTZ: It would be outstanding. Any honor that would come
Matt's way I think would be appropriate. We've had some guys,
Mike Klinkenborg the last couple years, Mike Elgin before that, Matt
Kroul in that same category has done a great job in the classroom.
Academically he's been a great leader, tremendous character, and he's
a great story. He kind of does it all and been very involved in
community service, too, and what have you. So he's the total package.
Q.
How is he able to balance all of that? We hear how time-consuming
football and classes are.
COACH
FERENTZ: Matt came here as a very mature guy, and it's a little
bit like the Chad Greenway story. When Chad was here it was like
being on vacation for him because of the workload he had at home.
I know Matt is going through the same thing. Matt doesn't get
many days off. We made a recruiting visit recently; I stopped
out there on a Sunday afternoon. We got him out of some wood splitting
or wood chopping chores, so he was glad to see us for that reason only,
I think.
Matt
has always been very mature, very, very organized with his approach,
handles academics, athletics all the same way. The guy is a model
citizen.
Q.
How important is the passing game going to be down the stretch given
that defenses are going to have to focus all their attention on Shonn?
COACH
FERENTZ: You know, our goals have always been to be as balanced
as possible. We don't want to be a one-dimensional team, run or
pass. I think our passing game is improving weekly. It's
been improving, and we still have an opportunity to grow.
So
to answer your question, it's going to be important. If we're
playing offense well, it means we're going to have the capability of
doing both, and obviously if people just set out to stop one particular
area, then you have to rely on the other, but it should make it a little
bit easier to do that.
Q.
The successful games on offense that you guys have had, do you feel
you need to reinforce to the guys what type of effort it took to have
that, or have they kind of caught on on their own?
COACH
FERENTZ: No, we never assume anything. We're going to have
to play hard, we know that.
The
other thing is obviously just protecting the football. We've done
that well the last few weeks. We didn't the two weeks prior to
that, and it makes a huge difference in the outcome of things.
Protecting the football and avoiding negative yardage plays, those two
things offensively are things that really keep you from having success.
Q.
You're not worried that they'll take that for granted now that they've
done it a few times?
COACH
FERENTZ: Hopefully not, but that's what we're going to keep coaching
hard and hopefully our players will keep playing hard. I think
they will.
Q.
The bye week, what's the biggest challenge in transitioning?
COACH
FERENTZ: Quite honestly I've forgotten. The one thing I
remember is you get frustrated during bye weeks. That came to
me somewhere around Thursday. It's a little bit like spring practice
where you don't have a game sitting right in front of you. The
focus is a little bit different.
All
that being said, I thought it was a good week, and we'll see what happens.
Hopefully we have a good three days here starting today.
Q.
Top scoring defense in the nation, I believe it's 11 points a game.
I know there's a lot of football to go, but could you talk about the
confidence your defense is playing with right now?
COACH
FERENTZ: I think the thing they've learned or at least they've
seen or that's been illustrated is when they play well and play together
and play smart, we've had good results. And if you look at the
scoring drives, it's not 100 percent, but the scoring drives, at least
in conference play, there's usually a play or two in those drives where
we open the door and give them an opportunity to really gain some momentum.
That's
just defense. If you're giving up big plays, either by penalty
or a big play in general, usually it comes back and gets you.
It's kind of like walking guys in baseball, late innings, so the focus
there is just being consistent, not losing sleep over the six-yard gains
but being consistent and being smart.
Q.
How improved is the secondary, if at all, this year?
COACH
FERENTZ: Again, I'm always kind of guarded. We still have
four games. But I think we're working hard back there. I
think the guys have a good attitude like everybody on our football team,
and I think we're making progress, incremental progress.
But
the proof is in the pudding. We still have four games to play
out, so we'll know a lot more in a month.
Q.
With Shonn getting all the yards and a little more attention, kind of
lost in the shuffle is the offensive line. Do they take pride
in that, seeing their back get a little bit more recognition?
COACH
FERENTZ: I think they do. I think just offensive production
in general makes linemen feel better, and certainly when a back is running
well, it's a direct reflection. I'd be remiss if I didn't include
our receiver blocking in that, too. When you start getting the
bigger runs, that's usually an indicator that the guys on the outside
are working, also, and they've been doing a good job there, so I think
that's great to see.
I
think everybody is figuring out that if everybody gives that little
extra bit of effort maybe something good will happen.
Linemen,
there aren't many stats they can hang their hats on, I guess, so I think
it's a good thing for them.
Q.
What are your thoughts on Ron Zook just in the times you've coached
against him?
COACH
FERENTZ: He's an excellent football coach. I think the work
that he's done at Illinois, without even going back, he's had a tremendous
career every step of the way. But if you just look at the turnaround
that they've made in a short period of time, taking that team to the
Rose Bowl last year speaks volumes. It's not easy to do.
Not many people have done that, and it's a real credit to Coach Zook
and his staff.
Q.
Going back to the bye week a little bit, how was your routine altered?
Did you get a little bit more time away, at home, to relax? Did
everybody have a three-day weekend?
COACH
FERENTZ: Not everybody, but players did. Well, not three
days, either, but close. They had Friday, Saturday. But
pretty much for us, we were in here three days and then everybody hit
the road Thursday and Friday recruiting. I say everybody; I didn't,
and the coordinators didn't. But our seven permissible guys were
out recruiting Thursday and Friday, and some guys were traveling back
Friday night. Most everybody got back Saturday at some point and
had Saturday off, and then we came back in Sunday and had a normal week.
But
the big difference is we were home at night every night last week.
We weren't up here watching tape and that type of thing, which is nice.
Nice to have dinner at home, even if it was a little later than normal,
but still nice.