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Two Freshman Safeties, One Brutal Schedule

If you spend some time looking closely at last year's stat sheets for Texas' 2008 opponents, you may well find yourself entertaining the same two thoughts that I did:

1. Holy crap the pressure on our redshirt freshmen safeties with zero game experience is going to be intense.

2. Will Muschamp is arriving not a moment too soon.

On the latter point, BZ's chapter in The Eyes of Texas 2008 will provide some relief: each of Muschamp's first years at LSU and Auburn resulted in significant improvement in the teams' pass defenses. While we thank our lucky stars Muschamp is taking over, click through the jump for a look at the challenge he faces.

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TEXAS PERSONNEL CHALLENGES

There's good news and bad news in the Texas secondary. Good: Texas' cupboard is stocked full of exciting young DBs. Bad: The young DBs lack experience. While tested corners Deon Beasley and Ryan Palmer will open the season the starters on the wings, the rest of the Texas secondary is incredibly green. If you believe as I do that two among Earl Thomas, Christian Scott, and Ben Wells will win the starting safety jobs (beating out junior Ishie Odeuegwu), Texas will open the season against FAU with two starting safeties who have as much live game experience as Oklahomans do with books.

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Being thoroughly lost is a scary thing.

 

With that said, the personnel news isn't all bad. For starters, both the defensive line and linebacking corps will be team strengths so long as the top groups are healthy. (The depth is another story.) And more abstractly, I think it's a good thing so many talented, young players will be leaned on heavily this year. Not only does that help for the 2009 run and beyond, but the seniority system of recent past was a cancerous one for team morale that contributed to the post-VY leadership vacuum.

And finally, let's be honest: a fan can labor through a trying season when the struggles are the product of young talent getting on-the-job training; patience runs thin when athletically limited veterans are the ones providing the suck.

2008 OPPONENT AIR RAID

Personnel challenges are just the tip of the iceberg; the majority of Texas' opponents will be testing the strength of every defense they face this fall. Most notably, through the air.

I mentioned last week that the Big 12 was aerially loaded, but the challenge for Texas' pass defense covers the entire 12-game schedule. The chart below lists each opponent's 2007 season statistics for passing attempts and yards per attempt, with national ranking in parentheses. To provide context for the arrival of Bobby Petrino in Fayetteville, Louisville's 2006 statistics are included, as well.

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Opponent 2007 passing stats. Click to enlarge.

 

The middle column gives you an idea of the frequency with which Texas' opponents turned to the air last season. Eight were among the top 40 nationally in attempts per game, with three in the top 10 and five in the top 25. Though I was surprised Bobby Petrino's '06 Louisville team didn't rank higher in attempts per game, even a merely balanced offensive attack from Arkansas in 2008 would mean a significant increase in passing from the past two seasons.

Even with Texas' personnel situation, passing frequency isn't itself something to fear disproportionately. However, the yards per attempt numbers in the right column show another list of eight opponents ranking in the top 40 in 2007. Among the eight above average passing teams in attempts, only Baylor, Rice, and Colorado passed the ball inefficiently. In their stead, Arkansas (Petrino), Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State are among the top 40.

In sum, only one opponent - Texas A&M - failed to register in the top 40 nationally in either attempts per game or yards per attempt. Five opponents finished ranked highly in both, and two of the three teams who failed to pass as efficiently as they do frequently are Rice and Baylor, the most likely wins on the schedule.

The 2007 numbers have to be taken seriously, too, as the quarterbacks for every opponent on the schedule return. The next chart lists each school's quarterback and 2007 class standing alongside his QB rating for the season.

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Opponent class and QB Rating in 2007.

 

Seven quarterbacks started full seasons as a freshman or sophomore last year, and the only two who weren't better than average were Cody Hawkins and Blake Szymanski; the former is a strong candidate to improve in year two of his father's system and the latter gets a coaching upgrade to Art Briles. Meanwhile, Sam Bradford will spend this fall's encore to his record-setting freshman season enjoying the fruits of a starting offensive line comprised entirely of seniors. Incredibly, sophomore Todd Reesing took Kansas to the freaking Orange Bowl. And won! Kansas!

Among the five juniors, even if we can safely dismiss Rice as a non-threat to Texas, the other four seniors-to-be could well present a legitimate challenge: Casey Dick should have a career year under Petrino, Chase Daniel is a returning Heisman finalist, Graham Harrell is testing the upward limits of Mike Leach's offensive philosophy, and Stephen McGee is 2-1 against Texas in his career.

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Duane Akina's 'F' in math led to a demotion.

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

What should a fan make of all this? To begin with, Will Muschamp won't be overpaid this fall; that's for sure. Beyond that, five additional thoughts to consider:

1. Fortuitous scheduling: The non-conference schedule happens to be a very useful one. If you'd asked me a year ago about this non-conference slate, I'd have noted my enthusiasm for playing the Piggies and indifference towards the rest. That's not the case today after thinking through the consequence of this particular group of opponents: Assuming Arkansas throws considerably more with Petrino at the helm, the Longhorns' very raw secondary will be worked to the extreme during all four non-conference games. To have our most glaring weakness so thoroughly tested in September is a fortunate benefit the '08 schedule will provide. Because any team trying to get its secondary warmed up in this year's Big 12 will have hell to pay.

2. Understated: Texas needs to stay healthy on defense. I rather set aside the depth issue early in the post, but in talking about what a successful defensive season for Texas would include, good luck with health shouldn't be discounted. As exciting as Houston-Miller are on the interior of the line, an injury to either could be devastating. Ditto at linebacker, where a healthy Muckelroy-Norton-Kindle has enormous potential, but where injury would lead to unhealthy doses of experienced-but-not-talented Rashad Bobino, talented-but-inexperienced Keenan Robinson, or inexperienced-and-untalented Dustin Earnest.

3. Team effort: Turnovers on offense will be costlier than ever. We don't talk about the offense's impact on defense enough, but especially this season, it's critical the Texas offense protect possessions. First and foremost, giving outstanding offenses a short field via turnover amplifies an already difficult challenge. Further, turnovers that occur early in a drive cut down on the time the team's defense can rest. For a multitude of reasons beyond the scope of this post, I think the success with which Texas' offense avoids turnovers will be the single most determinative factor in how the season turns out overall.1

4. Busted: The 2007 offseason still stings. This gets back to the depth issue, but one of the primary reasons Texas can't afford any injuries right now is because Robert Joseph and Andre Jones aren't around. Jones' presence would provide desperately needed depth on the interior of the line, while Joseph - who I had the highest of hopes for as a player - would likely have been a starter at safety no later than the middle of last season. The defensive situation this year would be infinitely better with Joseph in the mix.

5. Disrupting the spread: Create pressure from the front four. Whether it's Oklahoma shutting down the roaring Missouri offense in the Big 12 title game or the New York Giants beating the undefeated Patriots in the Super Bowl, stopping the pass-based spread attacks Texas will see time and again demands the defensive line get pressure on the quarterback. Health for the tackles and big seasons at end from Eddie Jones, Brian Orakpo, Sam Acho, and Russell Carter would do wonders for Muschamp's complementary strategic efforts.

1For example, and perhaps most importantly, the departure of Sweed, Charles, and Finley means the biggest question mark for Texas' offense involves the lack of proven playmakers. If no home run threats emerge in-season, sustaining drives will be imperative to secure points. For teams lacking quick-strike scoring ability, the penalty for lost possessions is all the greater.

1 recs  |  36 comments

Comments

08' season

I think the success of the 08’ season depends 100% on how well Colt McCoy plays. The defense will be better, but the QB play must get better. I still can’t belive Texas won 10 games with the QB throwing 18 INT’s. If Colt can cut the INT’s in half, I think they can win atleast 11 games.

I think with an improved O-line, Colt’s interceptions will go down. Much of it is his fault, obviously, but he understandably lost confidence in the line and therefore got jittery in the pocket last season. And it’s not like all his interceptions were his fault (example: Charles in the OU game). Contrast that to his freshman season when he had the luxury of a championship-tested line, in which case he had a year that exceeded the expectations of everyone.

One thing that can possibly hamper this is if we can’t find a run game that will scare our opponents, and we’ve obviously lost big playmakers in Charles, Sweed, and Finley. But I’m confident that we can field a decent run attack with what we’ve got and Colt can throw the ball efficiently.

I should point out that only one of the three losses can we cast a great deal of blame on Colt, and even that K-state game should fall on the shoulders of the O-line and defense. Colt played one of his best games against OU, and even though he should have played better against A&M, it is no question that we lost because our defense was downright atrocious. Any defense that allows McGee to look like Tom Brady is a very lacking one indeed.

I agree with PB; with the knowledge that we most likely won’t field a super high scoring offense this season and with our defense being so thoroughly embarrassed last year, particularly in the secondary, we have a gigantic question mark hanging over safeties that have zero experience. I love our talent but realistically we have to have patience with these guys. We know that Colt can be a decent QB with a good line and good supporting players already. We don’t know how these new guys will handle being throw into the fire so early.

Muschamp's track record

If you look at Muschamp’s track record at Auburn, the pressure defense he motivated didn’t feature any first or even third round draft choices out of the secondary. If you’ve got players with talent who can run down the occasional duck pass that comes from consistent pressure or make the receivers look around before they catch the ball, you can afford to give up a few pass plays. Also, in the red zone, if you play like you are coached, the back of the end zone is like an extra senior on defense. And don’t forget, two of those safeties, Wells and Scott, won “hard hats” for being the most aggressive defensive player early in spring football.

I think the bigger problem on defense is that there is no clear leader on the field. It needs to be someone who can see the field and help others make adjustments. There are some good candidates, but it would be best if Jared Norton or Sergio would step up in that role, since it is unlikely to be one of the safeties. Ryan Palmer might fill the bill as well.

The war eagles may come after me

But I don’t think Muschamp has ever had this much overall athleticism to craft a scheme around.

It’ll be interesting to see if his schemes become even more aggressive, when he knows that his players often have the speed to recover if they’re out of position.

good stuff PB

i also think the key component to the defense is the front 7. if we can bring hell to opposing QB other than baylor and rice that will help build confidence in our young but talented DBs. that means that they wont have to cover for that long if the QB is having to get rid of the ball in a hurry.

Kill, kill, kill!

Seriously? As long as we aren’t 100th in pass defense (or run defense, but that’s unlikely) this will be an improvement. Yuck. Who thought we would ever say that about Texas? By the end of the year, I expect the defense (barring monster injuries) to be able to beat A&M by themselves, especially with that O-line. That’s my defensive goal for the season: Defense outscore A&M on Thanksgiving. If that happens, we’ll have half of a national championship team in place for ‘09.

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