At first I was pissed when I read Starkey’s ESPN.com piece that started talking about Wannstedt wanting the defense to get better but turned into yet another Paul Rhoads, um, defense. Then I reread it and can only shake my head and laugh.
Rhoads was not oblivious to the cries for his head. Things were different in 2004, when 17 interceptions and four defensive touchdowns helped propel Pitt into the Fiesta Bowl. Nobody was complaining in 2002, when the Panthers ranked among the country’s top 25 in seven defensive categories and allowed the fewest points in a Pitt season since 1988, despite playing 13 games. Things were OK in 2001, too, when Rhoads’ defense racked up 38 sacks, and in 2000, when Pitt finished 17th in the country against the run.
I mean, at what point do you get tired of pointing out that the first two years were with players and a defense put together by the prior defensive coordinator. That the defense has steadily gone down hill every year.
He adds a new twist, though. He has Rhoads blaming the second half collapse on one play.
Rhoads pointed to a single play as a turning point. It happened against Rutgers, when Pitt, 6-1 at the time and trailing 13-10, had the Scarlet Knights pinned deep early in the fourth quarter. Tailback Ray Rice then bolted 67 yards up the middle to set up the clinching touchdown.
“After that,” Rhoads said, “she goes down the toilet in those last two games.”
Pitt actually lost four in a row after that, leading to speculation about Rhoads’ job.
Not that I don’t remember that play. Hell, that play put Ray Rice in the Heisman conversation (AOL had me do a post on Rice’s “Heisman moment” and that was the one). The thing is, when a coach — even in hindsight — says one play, one moment in a game has a lingering effect on a team. That reveals so much about the coach rather than the players. It says he couldn’t reach them, that he couldn’t get the team to move on and forget. That he let them have that excuse. Ralph Willard committed the same sin when he was the basketball coach (blowing the UConn game in his final season).
If anything, I’m even more negative to Rhoads then before. That he would say that one play broke the spirit and desire of the defense and his so-called “mad-dog intensity,” as Scott McKillop put it, did nothing to get the players back.
(1) Standing in line for a beer at halftime you just know its coming: the other team is going to make all kinds of adjustments, and Pitt’s D wil be unable to compensate.
(2) The talent excuse is nonsense. Not every school in the country has blue chip talent all over the field, yet very few schools have shown the kind of pathetic defense that we’ve seen recently.
(3) The coaches decide who plays and who sits. Rhoads was so desperate for ‘talent’ that he tried to put the best athletes on the field, rather than the best football players. i.e. Tommie Campbell. Then the coaches bitch about people not making plays.