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Morning Coffee Can't Stop With the State of the Union

Horns_bullet_mediumKirkendoll rapidly becoming Captain Consistent. McCoy called him "solid," shortly before his roomie one-upped that with "rock-solid." For all the (probably well-deserved) buzz about Brandon Collins this fall, James Kirkendoll may be the receiver who gains the trust of McCoy most quickly when game action finally begins on September 5th. According to McCoy, the Fiesta Bowl last season went a long ways towards establishing that integral trust between receiver and quarterback:

He had a great year last year, and his role is probably going to increase a little bit this year. He is playing really well and is consistent. He runs great routes and gets open. In our offense, when you have a guy that you can count on like that for every play, it really helps. Fourth-and-three, you have to make it in the Fiesta Bowl, and he comes up with a big play. That gains a lot of trust from a quarterback's perspective. I think at that point, he earned a lot of respect from our team. He is playing really good where he is. He is smart enough to play all three receiver positions on the field, so we will be able to use him in a lot of different ways.

High praise from the quarterback for a guy who only caught 21 passes last season. Make no mistake, though, were the Longhorns more thin at that position last season, Kirkendoll would have made a bigger difference. In fact, early in the season, Mack Brown apologized to Kirkendoll after a game because the young player hadn't seen any action, despite practicing well and doing what he needed to do to get on the field.

Star-divide

If Brandon Collins is the supreme athlete yet to put it all together, Kirkendoll is the hard-worker, the grinder who always knows where to be and runs crisp, precise routes. With his new dreadlocks, maybe he can be Larry Fitzgerald-lite for Texas this season. Not even Jordan Shipley can individually replace the loss of Quan Cosby from last season -- he can only do so much more -- so players like Kirkendoll must step up to fill the void. And if Kirkendoll's precision on the defining play of the Fiesta Bowl is any indication, the Round Rock product can ably answer the call.

Horns_bullet_mediumSped up and under center. Greg Davis made no secret during the spring of the team's desire to accelerate their pace to combat college football's clock-sapping rules. What he didn't mention prominently, which has subsequently come to light in the fall, is that the desire to run downhill by going under center coincides with the desire to speed up the tempo. Several possessions during the Fiesta Bowl actually previewed what Texas will run at times this season: a fastbreak offense operated running downhill and from under center.

It won't be a predominant strategy like it was for the Sooners last season -- Will Muschamp will make sure of that, as will the likely large leads in most games -- but it will provide the Longhorns a way to punish opposing defenses for putting a base personnel package onto the field Texas can abuse with their base personnel package. Critical to the success of that base personnel grouping will be versatility, particularly from the running back position. Will Vondrell McGee or Fozzy Whittaker better support accelerating the tempo?

PB's "Beyond the Box Score" post the other day illustrates the ability of the Longhorn offense to rely less on big plays and move the ball down the field with the controlled passing game. If Texas wore down Oklahoma's defense at the Cotton Bowl last year without speeding up the tempo, imagine the Longhorns once again exploiting OU linebackers from the flex while accelerating the game. Maybe Texas starts dominating early in the second half rather than in the fourth quarter. Maybe not, but Oklahoma State provides another opportunity to punish their lack of depth and accelerating the tempo does that for Texas.

Besides the stress from not being able to substitute and the simple pace, Texas may more effectively run the from under center by allowing Vondrell McGee to play more to this strengths and by allowing the offensive line more opportunities to drive block, an ability that might unleash the inner nastiness of the unit and allow maulers like Michael Huey to better showcase their skills. In fact, the Texas offense may increasingly begin to resemble that run by Oklahoma, with more work under center to help the running game, which subsequently helps the play-action passing games. In turn, play-action passing could allow more throws downfield, highlighting what should be a strength for Malcolm Williams and perhaps even Jordan Shipley as well.

In other words, even though the Longhorns might only go under center and speed up the tempo 30% of the time, it could be the type of edge that helps put the offense over the top and, whether earlier in the game or later in the game, create the type of big plays reminiscent of the 2005 team.

Horns_bullet_mediumSecondary growth. It's a pretty prevalent meme, this belief that the Longhorn secondary will grow by leaps and bounds this season. Could it be a pipe dream? Fortunately, since fall practice is now well under way, some key members of that secondary finally receive their turn to speak with the media. No player in the unit should make a bigger leap than Earl Thomas and the reasons are pretty simple:

After that one year, the game slowed down a lot. We're real comfortable as a whole in the secondary with our coverages. We give the quarterback different looks, different schemes, try to help the defensive line out.

Off-cited now to illustrate his growth is his interception in the spring game, but it is a vivid example of just how much difference the game slowing down can make. And that increased knowledge lets Muschamp be much more multiple than last season:

This year we just know the defense better. We're comfortable out there. You can disguise more. You can play ball now, you don't have to worry about messing up. You just go out there and play now...Disguising coverages, last year I was worried about getting my job done, and finishing plays. I had a lot of opportunities last year to catch balls and I dropped them. This summer as a collective group of defensive backs we practiced real hard on finishing plays and just trying to make plays for the defense.

Creating turnovers may not correlate extremely highly with winning in the initial studies Huck is working on over at Barking Carnival, but it may loom more largely when he manages to cancel out some of the noise. Maybe turnovers are more of a qualitative part of football -- that tangible change of momentum. The silent crowd on the road. The raucous crowd at home. The tired or confused defense coming onto the field again without having the chance to regroup totally and for the defensive coordinator to make adjustments.

It's an advantage the defense rarely afforded the offense last season and one that Thomas will play a great part in facilitating. After the loss of Brian Orakpo and Roy Miller, much discussion focused on which upperclassmen would step up to vocally lead the defense. The usual suspects are Lamarr Houston, Roddrick Muckelroy, and Sergio Kindle, mostly quieter guys by disposition, but a perhaps Thomas, an unusual suspect, may step up into that position:

Last year I was younger, this year I have to take it upon myself. Coach (Muschamp) had a meeting with me and he told me I need to step up and be a vocal leader out there because I've got to help Blake (Gideon) out. He's the quarterback of the defense, everybody knows. I don't want him to have that responsibility by himself, I want to help him out the best that I can.

Thomas mentions leadership in the context of directing the rest of the defense instead of being directed, but it may end up working in a larger context. Increased playmaking will set the tone for the entire defense and his ability to direct the secondary will give him increased credibility with the rest of the team. Perhaps Thomas doesn't become the unquestioned leader of the defense this season, but he becomes the main candidate to step up for 2010 after the departures of Muckelroy, Houston, and Kindle.

Horns_bullet_mediumOh yeah, there's still a Chiles here. Lost in all the hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing about the depth at defensive tackle and rapidly-diminishing group of tight ends is the move of John Chiles to wide receiver. After a couple of admittedly rocky seasons at quarterback, during which time he didn't neccessarily buy into the plan for him, particularly with the Q Package last season, Chiles says that he now has grown:

I'm just starting to get older, starting to get a little more mature.  I'm starting to go out to practice and just be focused on what I can do to help this team.

Despite the insane depth at receiver, Chiles knew during the spring that making the change would be better for himself and for the team. Even though he played receiver some in high school, it wasn't a completely seamless transition for him. Part of the problem was the extra weight that he carried as a quarterback, reaching 220 pounds. He's now down to 205 and that's help him regain some of the speed that made him so highly regarded coming out of high school.

The question for Chiles is whether or not he can crack the six-man receiver rotation. With Shipley, Kirkendoll, Collins, and Malcolm Wililams all firmly entrenched, that leaves only two spots open for guys like Chiles, DeSean Hales, Dan Buckner (though his move to the flex position may help him get on the field regardless), Brock Fitzhenry, and Greg Timmons, the impressive freshman.

If he makes it past that hurdle, he still must earn the confidence of Colt McCoy and finally show some elusiveness and big-play ability after the catch. Expect the coaches to run some slants and screens for Chiles to get the ball in his hands and determine how much of a threat he can be with the ball in his hands. The strange mixture of hesitation and desire to do too much that plauged him at quarterback needs to disappear. Hopefully his maturity will help in that regard and, like Sergio Kindle last year, he can finally live up to the prodigious hype that accompanied him to the 40 Acres.

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Comments

The editor in me just can't help myself....

Apologies for being so anal, GoBR, but can you explain/edit the highlighted words for me?

In other words, even though the Longhorns might only go under center and speed up the tempo 30% of the time, it could be the type of edge that helps but the offense over the type and, whether earlier in the game or later in the game, create the type of big plays reminiscent of the 2005 team.

PB’s “Beyond the Box Score” post the other (day?) illustrates the ability of the Longhorn offense to rely less on big plays and move the ball down the field with the controlled passing game.

1. Put the offense over the top
2. Most likely
This really isn’t rocket science

Quarterback controversy - of a different flavor

GoBR, just wondering if we could be facing a “quarterback controversy” on the defense, if Gideon was the undisputed QB last year, and now Thomas is stepping up to increasingly take on that role? Is there a chance that we could have confusion or conflict unless we are back to a single clear voice directing the defense from Game One?

QB controversey

I will try to find this post or article but in it is where Earl talks about helping Blake out and he was saying the Blake was the QB for the DB’s,so if he is taking the stance and calling him the QB of the defense then I’m sure he’s not gong to do anything but help out and be a voice.That’s at least how I read it.

It was on the Blake Gideon fan post.

It was pulled straight from Orangebloods in an article on Thomas.

there are 10 other guys playing defense, gideon can’t run to each one (not that he necessarily would) and inform them of what their job should be, the coverage, what the offense is doing.

with 2 guys informing the defense (mostly the db’s and lb’s), it takes pressure off of gideon to get to every single person and inform them of whatever they need to know. now there’s 2 guys doing it and gideon and thomas can get back to position faster. it’ll help alot in large noisy stadiums where you have to be in a guy’s ear to be heard.

No I don't think so,

The point is more that instead of being directed by Gideon, Thomas now not only knows where he’s supposed to be, but can also help out any other players, like Christian Scott, know where they need to be. It might diminish the value of Gideon a bit, but it’s hard to know how that might play out because Gideon should be better in his second year in the program.

Timmons

I think Greg will be in the top 4 or 5 by mid-season. His body control and hands may be the best on the team. Once the live action starts I think Cody will be too good to be just a third down or short yardage back. With Colt under center Cody will be just as effective as Vondrell if not more.

His body control and hands may be the best on the team.

I hope, but there really is no way to know this. He’s only been in a collegiate practice. That’s pretty high praise for someone who hasn’t earned any skins.

I’m certainly no expert on wide outs. I thought he had one of the two best highlight reels of the incoming freshmen class. He has impressed the coaches in a deep pool of talented athletes. Like any other freshman he has no “skins” but with his body control and hands, I believe, he will be a contributor this year.

Disregarding injury, who would he replace?

He would have to knock off Ship, Collins, Kirk, or Williams to move into the top 4. I think next year will be his year to shine. The kid is a super talent and I can’t wait to see him explode.

I did not say he would be a starter; a contributor. You will not have to wait till next year.

I hope he redshirts

Way too much depth and experience ahead of him to see the field in meaningful snaps. Why waste a year on what will likely only be mop up duty when the offense tends to not throw much anyway.

entirely possible that gilbert sees the field as a freshman and is throwing passes consistently, if only short routes that’re basically replacing a running game. we don’t know until the year starts how mop up will be handled. the coaches will do whats best for the team now, and for the future. if they feel that timmons (or the team) will benefit greatly from playing, he’ll play.

That's what I was getting at. nt
I highly doubt Timmons redshirts this year

I know after Finley left after his redshirt sophomore season, Mack felt burned and as though they had wasted a year of developing. I believe coming into last year Mack has a new approach on freshman playing right away and trying to maximize their 3-4 years on campus.

Don’t think we’ll see many more guys like Ricky Williams, Cedric Benson, Mike Williams, Derrick Johnson, and Roy Williams, all guys who returned for their senior season even though they were projected high first round picks.

Ok, but

he redshirted a bunch of players last year, including Hales and DJ Monroe, who Mack specifically mentioned being excited about after his performance in the All-Star game. And WR was a much bigger question mark last year than going into this one. It’s not like he’s gone 100% the other way and is not redshirting players anymore.

4 freshman WR’s and there needs to be some seperation, unless of course Timmons plays his way into the 2-deep.

anyone can have a bad week in practice. williams didn’t sniff the bcs bowl game because he had a bad week dropping balls in practice leading up to it. he didn’t get injured, but he was held out.

collins, kirkendoll, and williams are not the machines that shipley/quan are, or at least, they haven’t shown to be.

The top six wideouts will play.
The top 5 wideouts and John Chiles will play, no?

Would he agree to the move to WR and not get to play?

Mack's committed to putting the best players on the field, regardless of anything else
Major Applewhite disagrees
If Chiles wants an NFL payday

It may be best if he redshirts and has two years to crack the top three receiving rotation after learning the position. (someone let me know if this is impossible because Mack burned his redshirt as a freshman)

I believe it is possible

but I’m not sure if I’ve ever heard about it happening and it was something discussed briefly during the spring and it doesn’t seem likely.

Understood

Kids rarely seem to be interested in redshirting late, little do they know there are much worse things than being a UT football player.

It's hard to say how much

politics may weigh into that decision. I’d like to think those days are mostly gone, but I’m not sure. I think Chiles needs some game reps at receiver and the word is that guys like Hales, Monroe, and Fitzhenry aren’t ready yet, so I think that’s good for him.

Chiles has a few things going for him...

The word out of practice that I saw was that Chiles is extremely physical – both getting off the line of scrimmage versus the bump and laying blocks downfield. He’s lost some weight from last year, but he’s still somwhere around 210 and has used that weight to lay a few punishing blocks on Gideon and Thomas.

The coaches have always been big on guys proving that they can block before they see significant PT and I don’t think it could ever be more the case this year with the need to run the football and the talk of becoming “multiple” on offense. We need to have guys that can block downfield as well as make plays catching the ball. Probably even more so now from WRs because of the thin depth at TE.

Along with his familiarity with the offense, it will ultimately be Chiles’ physicality which could set him apart from the smaller Monroe, Fitzhenry, and Hales.

Good point, BMG.

We’ll get to see this play out but down field blocking makes the big plays…and Mack definitely likes big plays.

Not so fast

OU was super effective with their hurry up offense in 2008 but do not expect that the horns’ 2009 hurry up offense will be as effective as OU’s hurry up offense.

A key for OU’s success was the ability to run downhill with power and to pass efficiently with the same players. OU could run downhill/with power so well that defenses were forced to play a conventional 4 DL-3 LB defense. That left these defenses vulnerable to OU’s efficient passing attack. If defenses brought in more speed (extra DBs, for example) to deal with OU’s passing attack, OU would just attack these small, fast defenders via the OU downhill power running attack.

I don’t see UT in 2009 being able to run downhill/powerfully and passing efficiently with the same personnel as efficiently as OU. It has been several years since UT was a smash mouth running team. It is not clear that ability can be resurrected in one season. UT’s offense was quite one dimensional last season and has been tilted toward the passing attack in scheme and personnel for a few years..

In recent years, OU always featured at least one huge TE and normally also featured either a FB or another big TE. This means that OU can put a lot more blocking at the point of attack than UT normally can. OU’s running plays also developed much quicker than UT’s running plays. With UT’s TE injuries, there is a pretty decent chance that we will see a lot of 4 WRs again in 2009. Bye bye run blocking. In addition, OU’s TBs ran with power and are probably better power running TBs than UT’s TBs. Cody is a power back but he has been relegated to short yardage situations and FB. Fozzy is definitely not a power back. Vondrell will benefit from the change but is probably still not be as good as OU’s TBs.

I’m not sure how good the UT O line will be at smash mouth downhill run blocking. They have optimized for pass blocking for years. UT’s zone blocking scheme is all about making/maintaining contact, not about moving defenders.

UT could run with power effectively in 2008 only if UT switched personnel (including bringing in a defensive tackle to play fullback!). That is not a hurry up approach.

It will be interesting to see how well Colt adapts to playing under center (he hasn’t done that much in his career).

Last (but not least), GD loves the passing game. The smash mouth downhill running game is not his passion/obsession.

Moving to the hurry up offense in 2009 is a big step forward for the horns but don’t expect them to be as proficient as OU at the hurry up in 2009.

As he said

They arent looking to hurry up as often as OU did, it will probably be more like what we saw in the Fiesta bowl, short spurts of hurry up when we have what we see as an advantage on the field.

OU was more about sustained drives of hurry up, which is possible mainly as you said because of the freakishness of Gresham and their ideal RBs for it in Murray and Brown allowing them to be multiple on offense with the same personnel. I would bet by contrast we aren’t looking to be as multiple, just looking to exploit advantageous matchups.

Maybe we catch them with a bad coverage LB on Buckner or Shipley on the flex. Switch to the hurry up to keep that on the field and abuse it. If they get a timeout or a substitution done, its back to normal O.

So I don’t think its a move to the hurry up offense persay, but just a weapon to be used when needed.

Much depends on Barrett Matthews

If Barrett Matthews can get on he field mentally (that is without committing too many mistakes), he can give the Horns the versatility to shift in and out of under-center formations. Matthews has the potential to play the flex in the shotgun and TE or H-back in under-center formations This possibility was discussed extensively in a spring post by GoBR, and coaches have been surprised by his athletic ability in fall camp. He may not be ready by La-Monroe, but if he can get ready by the OU game, look out.

Even with lowly Greg Smith at TE, the no-huddle was implemented with incredible effectiveness in the second half against Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl.

The Horns have different “options” in their no-huddle because of Colt’s running ability, and this is a dimension the Sooners don’t have.

However, Kafka, I do agree that the wrench in the gears for the no-huddle approach is the risk in whether the attitudes of the OL can shift from play to play.

man, you’ve effectively convinced me the hurry up offense for Texas will suck….

except they ran it to beat OSU last year… and at several other key times. will it be as effective and efficient as OU’s? probably not. for many of the reasons you mentioned here. Texas isn’t the same style of football, but by no means does that mean they’ll be ineffective at forcing the defense to make mistakes due to improper personel on the field and improper reads/alignments. Even though Texas 2009 is not OU 2008, by no means does that mean UT’s hurry up will be ineffective and inefficient.

didn’t include a closingn block for my bold… stupid html tags. can you edit posts?

I never figured out how to edit a post on burnt orange; I don't think it is possible

I think we agree. The UT hurry up will be an improvement but we won’t be extracting all the possible gains until UT has a more balanced offence.

Possession Receivers

Last season the horns had two amazing possession receivers: Quan and Ship. Quan has graduated and Ship is no longer playing the flex TE (i.e. he has moved to the outside receiver position). Will Collins and Kirk be as amazingly dependable as Quan and Ship? Will they be able to take the abuse of all those hits after 7 yard gains? I don’t know, they are pretty small guys.

Last season the horns offense versus OU really took off when UT started relentlessly picking on the substitute OU MLB (via passes to Ship) after the starting OU MLB got hurt. Unbelievably, OU had no backup trained at MLB. The horns may not be so fortunate this season. OU may decide that they will put another DB on the field to dare UT to run the ball. It is not a given that the horns’ wonderful short passing attack will be as efficient this season or that Colt is going to hit nearly 80% of his passes. Quan was a huge part of our short passing attack and defenses are going to try to force the horns to run the ball.

Colt was a pretty effective runner last year

And Id venture to say that after bulking up, looking at a backfield of sub-200lb Dbs, he’ll be licking his chops if OU decides to go that route.

And let me stop you before you even start. I know we dont want Colt running a lot and taking a lot of hits. But the guy has turned himself into a huge threat in the running game. He’s a huge part of keeping defenses honest.

Colt McCoy________136 561 4.1 35 11
Vondrell McGee_____ 88 376 4.3 21 4
Chris Ogbonnaya____74 373 5.0 62 4
Cody Johnson______ 76 338 4.4 61 12
Foswhitt Whittaker___ 64 284 4.4 21 0

Our running game will be fine. It wont be perfect, but it will be effective when needed.

reply fail.

this was suppose to reference your above post.

I think you can add Chiles to the mix

of guys helping to replace Quan’s production. Between the 3 of them I think we’ll be ok in filling the void and holding up to the pounding.

VERY OFF TOPIC

But please guys i need some opinions if any of you would know. I went out to celebrate a friends 21st last night and was assigned DD duties since i had to work in the morning. While leaving the place i backed into a mid 2000’s Hyundai with my friends SUV that was much larger than the car i drive. It did pretty minimal damage and pretty sure it avoided the bumper but it left a big dent in the rear passenger fender. Anyone know what i might be looking at spending if i dont claim it on insurance? I told the people to get 3 estimates when they called but its driving me crazy not knowing how much im gonna be out. Thanks for any help

Well the repair places always insist on replacing anything and everything

that has the slightest bit of damage. The place is probably going to use new or salvaged parts (if youre lucky). You mention it being the fender thats damaged but its likely the whole panel that will be replaced because they never “hammer out” anything anymore. So parts, paint, labor it could run you about $400-$600. Thats my best amateur estimate without seeing it. I’ve dealt with car repairs twice and it always blows my mind when I see the estimate.

Strangest non sequitur of the year

Maybe this site is better than a longhorn football blog to answer your question

Good Call

just figured someone might have some insight. 1600 bucks though. There goes tuition

I've got a rash

in a funny place and it just won’t go away. Any advice on treatments?

Hilarious!

Try the preventative approach.

RB

A little off subject, but what is going on with Jeremy Hills!!!?!??!?!

Come on

Can’t you keep it on topic TSH? I mean really. ;)

But, I haven’t heard anything about him… hmmm

I read somewhere

That he turned some heads, but because he’s smaller that he will probably stay second string. I like Jeremy, I thought he had great burst, and great vision but i’m also a Fozzy Fan.

Well, I wouldn't think Shipley could replace Quan's achievemants

Seeing as he virtually matched Quan in every statistical category last year (Cosby only leapt over him in yards and receptions due to his monster game in the Fiesta Bowl), Shipley would have to double his output to cover for that. Not even Roy Williams could get those type of numbers :).

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