Monday Presser Transcript 11-26-12: Brady Hoke
Bullets:
- Sorry I didn't post a postgame presser transcript. I was too busy avoiding the internet, and no one said much anyway.
- Devin Gardner's redshirt paperwork will be filed soon. Hoke expects him to get his fifth year.
- Hoke will talk to Taylor Lewan about the NFL draft this week.
- Bowl practice will not begin until the opponent is revealed.
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“You guys didn’t get fed. Well, that’s poor.”
Makes us ornery.
“Yeah. You know, we’re all real disappointed in the outcome down in Columbus obviously, but one thing I can tell you is we’re really proud of this senior class. Proud because of the leadership and the development of the program that they’ve helped and their commitment to the university, and proud of how they’ve continued to lay the foundation of what we want to be as a program. It was hard. It was disappointing for them to play their last game against Ohio and not be successful like we all want to, and that’s an expectation. But we’re proud of them and we’ll have one more opportunity with them. We’ll take that very seriously.”
As you looked at the film during the second half, aside from the turnovers, what did you see could have been done differently?
“Well, I think a lot of it, number one, was short yardage things. We prided ourselves on being good in short yardage. We tried three different, really four different schemes. Ran the iso, ran the power, ran the quarterback read play, and just couldn’t -- didn’t -- execute it like we’d like to. They all had possibilities besides probably the iso that could have been executed, but that was disappointing, when you get 21 plays in the second half. That’s hard when you want to get into rhythm and turnovers are part of it. We’ve talked about turnovers throughout the year. You turned the ball over four times, you’re not going to win many football games. At the same time, I thought from a defensive perspective, we’d love to have been a little better vs. the run in there, especially with Hyde. Braxton is going to get his share to some degree, but the defense stood up when it had to. Liked to have, on the last drive, gotten the ball back one more time. We went in at halftime and it was 21-20. If they don’t score, they can’t win. Well, we have to keep them from scoring.”
Was Denard limited at all, and did it affect the way you called plays?
“Not really. I mean, he can throw the ball, but he can’t throw it the way and with the confidence that he’d like to throw with. That was one reason we weren’t going to put him out there in a situation where he’s not throwing it as well as he knows he would like to. That would be unfair. No, he was okay. The last two drives we had to try and get points, so keeping Devin in the game and throwing the ball a little bit, and unfortunately we throw the pick. But that’s football.”
Why didn’t Denard get the ball more in the second half?
“We only had 21 plays. We tried to give him a shovel, tried to get him out -- I’m trying to think what other situation it was -- it just didn’t present itself. And then with the fourth and two, fourth and three, it was the same play he had a nice run earlier in the football game, and we don’t block it right.”
Why did you limit the amount of plays involving both Devin and Denard? Did you not think it would work?
“I would say the reason would be it wasn’t exactly the timing of it. There’s a timing of how you set things up, and especially in the second half. We turn the ball over three times, so offensively you’re a little bit out of your realm and just your mojo, if you want to call it that. So trying to do something that maybe wouldn’t be as successful, it just didn’t feel like it.”
Punt vs. go for it on 4th down? Whose call was that?
“Mine. Mine. Mine.”
Why did you change the call?
“That’s the only thing I wish I wouldn’t have done was call the time out. Should have left them on the field and gone for it.”
Were you going to fake punt?
“Maybe.”
Reasons for success on the road vs. at home?
“Well. I think when you look at turnovers on the road, the one thing I know you have to do on the road is run the football. We have not run the football or taken care of the football as well as we need to away from home.”
You called last season a failure because you didn’t win the B1&. What do you tell your players about this season?
“Well we didn’t win the championship, and that’s the expectation. I think there was some growth, and I think that growth is probably as much with how the senior class came together. I think it also is for the young guys who played some snaps, some valuable snaps in football games, so that foundation of what you want to do in the weight room, what you want to do in spring football, summer conditioning, winter conditioning, all those things -- there’s always that foundation, and how one group responds, and is it a better job than the last group? It’s disappointing to all of us, more disappointing because of the seniors. For them.”
Reaction to the 2012 schedule? Two undefeated teams, defending national champion, and potential B1G champion … What were some of the troubles this schedule presented?
“I don’t know about troubles. You’re going out there to compete. Maybe self-inflicted troubles at times, giving the ball up, not running the ball well enough, all those things are part of it.”
Does the quarterback situation for the bowl game change based on Denard’s progress?
“Yeah, a little bit. A little bit. But I think at the same time, there’s an opportunity to expand more maybe on some of the two-quarterback things.”
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Roundtable
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“As Phil Hanlon said, the sun came up and it wasn’t quite as bright.”
How much is Devin’s November a springboard for him going forward? Also, do you expect his redshirt application to go through?
“Um, yeah I would expect that would go through. I think all the documentation and everything is being sent to the Big Ten. And I think there is some momentum. I know how terrible he feels right now, but I know there is momentum and things to learn from, and also he had some success, too.”
Ball security? What can you do?
“Heh. Heh. You’ll see guys walking around campus with footballs in their arms.”
Have you done that previously?
“Not here. But I’ve done it.”
How happy are you to see Roundtree get some plays these last few weeks?
“Well, I think we’re all excited for all of them, but Roy, because of how he has handled himself as a student and an athlete, how he’s come to work every day, I think all those things are a big part of it. I thought he played a good football game the other day obviously, and being an Ohio kid, you want to see that for him.”
Denard and route running?
“Well, we had a couple routes in there for him. It was pretty obvious that they paid attention to where he was. You can do that. Has he had a whole lot of route running and that stuff? No. Maybe if he would have had a little more, but that wasn’t the plan.”
Did you think the offense became a bit predictable when Denard was on the field?
“I don’t think so, because I think there were plenty of opportunities. You have to block, too.”
How quickly can the offensive line and running back issues be fixed?
“Oh, sheez. I don’t know if there’s any quick fixes. I think there’s some, oh, some guys that we haven’t played that we’ll see. They have some growth to do, though. That’s a big part of it. That’s these 15 days that we’ll practice, will be a big part of it. We’ll bring them along. In both of those areas, there’s a higher expectation than what we’re doing right now.”
What do the young offensive linemen get during the bowl practice that they don’t get during the regular season?
“Well the one thing we’ve tried to do is continue to develop them all fall. But there will be a couple practices in there that will be a little more focused on what they’re doing.”
Will Fitz try to apply for a redshirt next year, or will he try to get back on the field?
“I don’t know. I think he’ll have a full recovery. How long that is? I don’t know.”
Going forward, will you think about using two quarterbacks in the future?
“I think depending on your personnel. I think there’s not any limitations to what you might be able to accomplish with it. But I think in doing that, you have to look at then, offensively, what are you? Are you a pro-style? Spread? What are you? How do you get them both the ball?”
Could you take a guy like Dennis Norfleet and turn him into a read-option back?
“You could, I’d imagine. You could.”
But you’re not thinking about it.
“I’m not as radical as you are right now.”
After Iowa, did you look back and wonder if you should have tried to the Devin-Denard thing earlier?
“No. Because we weren’t in position to. [Denard] was our quarterback. No.”
Going for 4th down? What’s the process for making that decision?
“Gut.”
Do you talk to Al?
“I just told him to, after I called the timeout, be ready. And then go. And I thought we had a good play. In fact, we did have a good play if we execute the blocking.”
So it was more on the offensive line?
“It wasn’t blocked the way I’d like for it to be blocked.”
Does execution on the offensive line change the way Al calls the offense?
“Sure it does. Sure it does. And same thing defensively. You’ve got to have enough calls in there -- which I guarantee on both sides of the ball, we had enough calls -- that if they’re taking advantage of you somehow someway, that you can respond differnetly. Counteract.”
How much do you talk to Borges? Especially during the second half? What did you think of his playcalling?
“I thought he called a good football game. If we do a couple things better, I think we’ll all be much happier. I thought the playcalling was exactly what it should have been, and how much do I talk to him? I talked to him at half time. I talked to him during the third quarter. I talked to him during the fourth quarter.”
Chris Bryant’s recovery?
“He’s coming along. All those guys, Blake, all those guys are making progress daily. Who will be ready for spring? I don’t know that yet. We’ll be very smart in how we do get those guys back involved. ”
What’s your schedule in terms of recruiting, working out, practices, etc?
“Recruiting. Working out -- not the staff. Some of them do, but gameplanning once we find an opponent.”
Will you not practice until you have an opponent?
“Yeah. We won’t. We won’t practice. We’re going to lift and try and give them some time this week. Finals coming up. All those kinds of things.”
Was the reason you didn’t have Denard and Devin on the field at the same time more because you thought Ohio State’s defense was too good?
“Well I think I was talking about throwing the ball with Denard. If he can be successful, and he didn’t have that confidence, why put him in a situation that’s not fair to him?”
Were you planning on having a fake punt?
“We always have a fake punt ready. For a long time I’ve had it ready.”
What happens when you get that gut feeling in the moment?
“Coming off the first half we had, from an offensive perspective, you felt pretty good that we could get the first down.”
Early jumprs to the NFL? When do you have those conversations?
“No, we’ll talk about it this week. We’ve done our due diligence, sent all the information in that we need to.”
When does the draft advisory board meet?
“I’m trying to think. There’s a date that they’ll give you the information that you need. I can’t remember what that is.”
Have you talked to Taylor?
“No we’ll talk about it this week.”
Is Lewan the only player who’s seriously looking into it?
“I can’t think of anything else.”
When someone’s considering a move like that, do you gear them towards coming back for their senior season, or you take it on a case by case basis?
“I’m going to gear the young man towards what’s best for him.”
How discouraging is it that we’re talking about the same stuff for 10 weeks about the offensive line?
“Yeah.”
What do you attribute that to?
“You know, we just didn’t develop as well as we’d like.”
Have you seen improvement from Denard week to week?
“Mmhmm. Yeah. You mean in him healing? Oh yeah. Yeah.”
What is the difference between arm strength and confidence?
“I think it’s all part of it. How the ball spins. All that stuff.”
Ss is the ball not spinning right?
“I don’t think it’s spinning the way he’d like to.”
If Denard is 100% for the bowl,
“I would think he’d play quarterback, maybe wideout, maybe running back, maybe --”
Kick returner?
“He might do that.”
Is it safe to say that Devin’s your quarterback for next year?
“Well, he’s going to have to compete and earn it, but he’s put some -- he’s done a good job of what we’ve asked him to do to this point.”
Do you expect Russell to be back next year?
“Yeah. Oh yeah. I mean, and they’ll compete.”
How badly do you need a running back, too, in addition to fixing the offensive line?
“You need both. You better have a back, or a couple backs. And you better be able to have guys up front who can move the line of scrimmage.”
They didn’t progress this year, either, did they?
“I think it’s hard to evaluate to some degree, for the simple fact that maybe if we had blocked better, it may have been better.”
Why do you think Devin’s going to get his fifth year?
“Just a gut feeling. I mean, I’m serious.”
Do you have all the paperwork?
“We have all the paperwork, yes.”
You have a lot of gut feelings.
“Yeah, I do. I have a big gut.”
November 27th, 2012 at 6:45 PM ^
Everything you've argued simply ignores the idea that players should get better from their freshman to their senior season. You're someone who doesn't understand player development, thus this is pointless.
I'm sorry you wasted your time not responding to anything I said.
November 27th, 2012 at 6:54 PM ^
Yeah, they should develop over 4 years. But guys didn't develop under the previous regime. The guys who were here and played multiple years for RR got worse over time. I understand player development just fine, and that player development is no certainty if the quality of football education they are receiving is poor.
As to not responding to anything you said, you must have missed me responding to pretty much every point you tried to make (e.g. weak schedule, comparing OSU teams, decline of the offense). I'm sorry you're not a very good reader.
November 27th, 2012 at 8:23 PM ^
You treat each season as if they are played under the exact same circumstances.
You make claims that because the 2011 offense scored more points they were better. What would have happened had hte 2010 offense had the 2011 defense? Was Denard a Junior in 2010? A Senior? How does Ray Vinopal get worse in his first season? How does JT Floyd get worse? Kovacs? Avery? Christian? They had just started playing college football. Who on offense got worse?
Against Ohio State: Did Rodriguez's offense have an offensive line full of juniors and seniors? A JR/SR qb? Was the defense top 30?
You literally do not take anything into account other than the numbers. Each season is different. You, for some reason cannot understand this.
November 28th, 2012 at 10:32 AM ^
Under RR, why does Ezeh get worse? Mouton? Why is 5 star BWC shifted to offensive line? Under Hoke, why does BWC excel at his original DL position? Why do first year starters like Countess, Bolden, Ross, play well?
How would the 2011 offense have performed had they ran the same number of plays as the uptempo RR squads? More plays logically means more points, right? Well they scored more points with less plays. Hmmm.... Against Ohio State, did Hoke have an offensive line full of draftable NFL players? RR had Schilling, Molk, Lewan... Hoke has Lewan and four really nice guys who I'm sure will have successful careers in business, engineering, or whatever. Against Ohio State, did Hoke have anyone as dynamic as Brandon Graham to pressure OSUs quarterback?
Michigan was trending down until the regime change. There was literally no hope for the defense to improve much if at all, and there was equally as little hope that the offense would ever put together a decent performance against teams not named Delware State, Massachusetts, or Illinois.
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