Big East Week: Life On the Margins
Or: How you should learn to stop worrying and love the Knights.
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Nobody seems to know exactly what to think of Rutgers yet, respecting the Knights’ stark upward arc – last year wasn’t a from-nowhere story, it being a surprising but logical step up from the truly pioneering 7-5 team in ‘05 – but maintaining a wary distance in the summer polls. Only Athlon thinks the Knights might approach their most recent success (RU is tenth in its top 25 on the strength of 13 mostly key returning starters), and the only outlet that thinks they’ll finish ahead of Louisville or West Virginia in the conference (in this case, Louisville). The perception elsewhere seems to regard seven or eight wins as the program’s new "default," and last year a flukey departure from whence a still-building upstart shall return.
But did Rutgers play like an 8-4 team with a couple breaks? As Steele might say, it was net plus-four in close wins, games that could have relegated the same darling team to the fringe with a different bounce or two:
| Game | Score | Yards +/– | 1st Dwns +/– | TO Margin | "Cheap" Pts.* |
| at No. Carolina | W, 21-16 | – 41 | – 3 | + 2 | - |
| at So. Florida | W, 22-20 | – 21 | Even | + 2 | + 8 |
| Connecticut | W, 24-13 | – 18 | – 1 | + 1 | + 14 |
| Louisville | W, 28-25 | + 66 | Even | 0 | + 3 |
| at W. Virginia | L, 39-41(3OT) | + 13 | + 1 | + 1 | – |
Otherwise, the skepticism here concerns the help the Knights needed from Carolina’s Joe Dailey and USF’s Matt Grothe, who threw two interceptions apiece that served to kill a potentially game-winning drive and set up a pair of easy field goals that provided the eventual winning margin, respectively, in games their teams otherwise might have won.
What’s most interesting, though, is what doesn’t appear on that chart, for both good and ill from the Rutgers perspective. Optimistically, aside from UNC in the opener, the challenges were mostly against good teams; lesser fare like Illinois, Syracuse and Ohio U. of Ohio and threatening fringe teams like Navy, Pittsburgh and Kansas State were handled fairly decisively, where the heavies (West Virginia and Louisville) were obviously in the grasp. This was the work of a legitimate, durable contender. In that light, every game on the schedule is within reach, and eight of them seem safe enough to be counted as relative givens, if not automatic.
On the flip side, Rutgers was handled decisively itself at Cincinnati, one of the real foundation-rocking games of the season, one that singlehandedly cut the gap between the middle of the pack and its ambitious stray to nil; given last year’s close calls, the six games against Navy, Maryland, Cincinnati, South Florida, UConn and Pittsburgh look dangerous enough in conjunction with obvious underdog situations against WVU and Louisville to threaten the Knights’ bowl status in the worst case.
That would be a stunning development, especially because Rutgers has the personnel back to continue doing the important things it’s done extremely well each of the last two years: offensively, the Knights can run on virtually anybody, even without a dangerous (or, like, mediocre) passing game to divert attention from Ray Rice, and defensively, they get after the quarterback like crazy. The chaotic hornet’s nest of random blitzing that so impressed with five sacks against Louisville has racked up 88 QB takedowns in two years, just four short of the same Cardinals for most in the country, and has produced ten games in that span with at least five sacks. Getting back Jamaal Westerman and Eric Foster in the pass rush is the equivalent of returning Rice and acclaimed tackle Jeremy Zuttah in the running game – those elements have consistently delivered at a high level and make Rutgers a very non-flukey threat at all times. This was the best defense by a mile in a defensive conference last year and should start this season with the same distinction until proven otherwise.
Britt: the Big East’s worst nightmare. Well, outside of West Virginia, anyway.
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And that was an improvement, actually, over his dreadful freshman relief effort (2 TD to 10 INT), which along with the late contributions of hyped freshman Kenny Britt (lanky late qualifier averaged 15 yards on 29 catches in a little less than half a season and took over the game at West Virginia) is reason enough for optimism that commenters are out pre-empting the inevitable skepticism. They have an argument: Teel as a sophomore, however mediocre the vast majority of the time, was a significant step up from Teel the freshman, and reasonably a prelude to a much-improved upperclassman with chops; the Cincinnati disaster, in fact, occurred in the midst of a minor passing renaissance that began with Louisville and corresponded with the addition of Britt:
| Comp. % | Yds./Gm. | TD | INT | Off. Scoring* | |
| First 10 Gms. | 52.4 | 144.3 | 7 | 13 | 17.5 |
| Last 3 Gms. | 65.2 | 230.7 | 5 | 0 | 38.0 |
That’s what Britt meant to Teel, and what a competent Teel meant to an offense that had been painfully one-dimensional all season. If Teel the junior is a holdover of the unsung Teel of December, Rutgers is a contender with no reservations. But probably only if he’s that.
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Great analysis...
Also, do you or Steele take into account when looking at cheap points the fact that some teams have extremely aggressive special teams philosophies that produce this field position? Classic would be VT, but Rutgers blocks a lot of punts, etc. as well...
by David K on Aug 1, 2007 2:24 PM EDT 0 recs
Excellent Article
First, I love Phil Steele - the way of looking at things and the data is great. But even so, stast are not everything.
Second, USF does nto deserve credit for a "dropped" 2-point conversion. that is completely mistaken. That was great defense on that play. The Rutgers DB made a great play partly defelcting the ball away. the ball did hit the WR's body - but only after it was deflected. I do NOT consider that a drop.
Third, the re-kick against UL was partially due to an excellent play by the RU long snapper, who snapped the ball early, as soon as he saw the UL defender offsides (he was quoted as doing this after the game, and you can see how the timing of the play is slightly off, supporting that interpretation).
Fourth, the key play in the RU-WVU game was actually not the missed 2-point conversion (which was not a drop but either a good defenisve play, or equally likely, pass interference). The key play was actually a DROPPED TD PASS by one of the RU WR's on RU's last drive in regulation. Instead of a 7-point lead, RU had just a 3-point lead. WVU subsequently tied the game on a FG very late ... instead of being forced into a TD effort.
Fifth, one thing that most commentators about Teel's 2006 performance do nto take into accou8nt is that not only was he himself young, but RU's WR's were ravaged by injury, and even younger. RU's top WR was hurt in the Howard game, and was out for the season. Another TWO WR's were hurt, and out for the year even before the season started. In essence, by the Howard game, RU had lost its top 3 returning WR's. RU was playing a true sophomore who played as much QB as a true frosh as he did WR, a redshirt frosh WR, a transfer JR and 2 true frosh WR's. the conststantly ran the wrong patterns on timing patterns (resulting in many bad looking throws). More improtantrly, I counted over 30 dropped passes last seaosn. While no one would expect college WR's to catch every ball. Stil, 30 dropped passes in a season for a team that only threw the ball 24 times a game ... that is HUGE. If the WR's had dropped just half that amount, Teel would have completed 60% or more of his passeslast seaosn, instead of 55%. Also, there were AT LEAST 5 dropped TD passes ... certain TD passes. Even if just 3 of those were caught (and there were interceptions following at least 2 of the dropped TD passes), Teel would have had 15 TD pases, to 11 int's ... not fantastic but looking a lot better than what his stats looked like.
Sixth, In the Cincy game, though Teel was not good, in the 1st half he did have TWO certain TD passes dropped, while the game was still in hand. what would that game have looked like if it was 17-17 at half, rather than 20-3? And the 1st dropped TD pass was early, before Cincy had scored, after a turnover. not only did the RU receiver drop a wide open sideline pass that would have been an easy TD (a true frosh dropped the ball), but the RU FG kicker then missed the FG try, so RU ended up with no points. An early TD there competely changes that game.
My point is about Steele, not your piece: RU had a magical year last season, that may not be repeated, true neough. Yet RU actually SHOULD have had an even better year, actually, if not for its very inexperienced receiver corp and QB. RU could just as easily had been 12-0 as it could have been 8-4.
Keep up the great work.
by jellyman on Aug 1, 2007 6:31 PM EDT 0 recs





