Upon Further Review- Florida

Upon Further Review- Florida

Lance Roffers
Lance Roffers

Comments (123)

Great write up as usual, thanks for all your hard work.
 
Where would you rate the coaching staff, in the things you liked or the things you didn’t like? I’m left with a haunting feeling that experience among the coaching staff (i.e, an adult in the room) is glaring. I may be premature in my feeling, but that is what came through to me. Please give me your two cents on this.

“Not good enough to win” on offense.

“Good enough to win” on defense.

“Dreadful enough to cause a loss” on special teams.
 
Enos and baker by the film put us in bad positions where plays were F’d from the start. Difference is the D erased it most times (or Franks blows) by making a play and the O looked like they all chipped in to throw the game

Ok Coach D'No.
 
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Well that was pretty disheartening to read -- and I only got up to halftime. I'm going to have to read the second half recap with a scotch for sanity's sake.
 
Good point. I thought John Campbells claim to fame in HS was that he was a mean SOB. Didn't see that against UF. Maybe with confidence and reps that will come in due time.

He was helping up Gators at points
 
“Not good enough to win” on offense.

“Good enough to win” on defense.

“Dreadful enough to cause a loss” on special teams.

i think that we'll only improve from here on out .... lance did you see potential in our tackles?

also do you think this is a move for the future? i get the idea that if the upper classmen aren't blatantly better than younger players we're gonna play the young guys, take our lumps and grow from there
 
“Not good enough to win” on offense.

“Good enough to win” on defense.

“Dreadful enough to cause a loss” on special teams.

This is exactly what I've been saying since Sunday. To me, it was the same old story. Yes, the offense at times looked better than what we saw for the vast majority of last season. But the bottom line is, it still wasn't good enough to win. Honestly, wasn't really even close. If UF has a halfway competent QB and don't give us the ball twice on totally unforced plays, it's probably a 14+ point win for them. And that was mostly due to the offense and special teams being mostly inept in every regard.

There are positives to take, yes. But last year, the defense was either dominant or good enough to win in just about every game. And the offense was putrid, special teams embarrassing in just about every game. Through 1 game of 2019, all of those things are still true.
 
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Welcome back to Upon Further Review, where I will review each Canes game and bring you screenshots from important moments in plays throughout the action. This week is the infamous “week zero” in which Miami and Florida engaged in a sloppy battle filled with mistakes and coulda, shoulda, woulda’s.

First play of the game and Miami motions both TE’s to the wide side of the field and runs a jet sweep to KJ Osborn. I froze the action here for a couple of reasons: 1. I’m not sure why John Campbell is attacking the backside LB and leaving the pursuit LB free to roam on a play designed to go outside. 2. The Florida defender is pretty sneakily holding Brevin Jordan from getting outside to his block. I still cannot imagine the plan is to simply let the LB flow down the line and make a pretty easy tackle here.
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2nd down and Miami motions out of a bunch set and puts DeeJay out wide on the boundary. They take Brevin from one side and put him into the slot. This is nice design as it gets Marco Wilson to follow DeeJay, the slot CB to go on Jeff Thomas and the LB to come over on Brevin. That’s exactly what you want is to get Brevin isolated onto #33. Small additional tidbit is you can see the maturity that Osborn has among the receiver group as he is the one pointing out a possible CB blitzer. The play was a little swing pass to Brevin that goes for big yardage and was half a step away from a TD. I like how they started Jarren out under center, then put him back into shotgun.
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The truth of the matter is that Mallory was a poor blocker last year and on this play if he gets one step upfield and turns this block, this play goes for nice yardage. Instead, #7 easily long arms him with one arm and strings this play out. Have to do better or they might need to think about replacing him in that role.
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First game as a true freshman and he’s out there at LT, I get that part of things, but Zion is late off-the-ball. Ball is essentially to the QB and he hasn’t moved out of his stance. Look at Scaife, who is halfway into his pull already. This was a swing pass to Osborn outside and the defender nearly knocked it down because he runs right by Zion on this play. By the way, if anyone ever wonders why Mike Harley plays so much, it’s because he is a ferocious blocker. He blocks his man with a cut block, then gets up and impedes a second defender to allow Osborn a big run.
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Campbell never touches this defender, who if he makes this block Brevin might score. He has to evade 51 and it pushes him to the sideline where the S gets him down. It probably isn’t a popular sentiment, but I think Scaife should be the LT and Donaldson should be the RT moving forward and fill out the interior with what is left. These T’s are starting out very poorly.
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Mallory on the end (against 7) is such a bad blocker. This is comical how easily he is tossed away by the defender. Donaldson completely bent over at the waist. Then the second screen shot shows 51 just stealing Campbell’s soul. Go hit someone big fella! You are the lead on a toss sweep against a LB and a S. Go in hard right and cut through #51 and impede the S at the same time and he gets the edge! Scaife is the best OL on this team by a long way.
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To this point in the game, I haven’t seen a play where I would say Zion “won” his block. Welcome to college, my man.
Jarren missed it here. I think he’s looking for the corner route, so this may not have been his read, but he can throw #3 open behind that LB on this play. Essentially throw it to the official and this is a completion. Zion is beat easily again and the RB has to help, which means he can’t step up and hit the defender coming up the middle who eventually sacks Jarren.
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Gurvan has to make this tackle in the hole rather than getting shook and giving up a bunch of extra yards.
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Something went wrong in the special teams alignment here. Two guys should not be standing on top of one another at the 31-yard line here. I really wish 7 would just kept going upfield here and made sure he was outside and forced the punter back inside to his pursuit. He stops his feet and let the punter get outside of him. Bad contain and poor alignment led to one of the biggest plays of the game.
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I believe Pinck and Shaq were supposed to slide one step to their left on this play as Toney is in motion and creates a mismatch at the bottom of your screen.
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But this official standing right there and watching the play misses a blatant hold on Bandy. That has to be called, my man.
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Then the OL has a pretty blatant block-in-the-back. This has to be called, my man.
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Then Gurvan has to make this tackle. Yes, the official standing there should be let go after this play, but this is exactly what we feared without Jaquan out there erasing mistakes in the secondary. Last year, this is simply a first down and move to the next play. This night it was a TD as Hall and Carter both fail.
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This play needs to be a check to a pass at the LOS. He’s got all that space in front of him and you can just pitch it out there and one missed tackle might be 6. They run a slant right into where #3 is going already and it’s a big hit.
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Does Zion know the snap count? Hasn’t moved and his man runs straight by him and sacks Jarren.
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If I’m the OL coach at Miami I’m questioning my tackle’s manhood. You have a free shot at this man’s ribs and you give him a love tap. He didn’t release downfield, he just taps him. Hit this dude so hard in his ribs with everything you’ve got and you will start to slow down that pass rush. You can truly impact speed rushers by attacking their ribs every single chance you get. I want my OL to be mean and want to body people out there. Zion, get physical. In fact, this guy gets off this block and hits DeeJay downfield. That is despicable to allow that to happen to your RB.
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Then we take a timeout on the punt because we can’t get lined up. No Bueno, fellas, no Bueno. (Not pictured)
Florida does the quick jet sweep to Toney and he gets the edge. Garvin retraces and hits him, but Romeo did a great job taking on two blockers to force Toney to come back inside. (Not pictured)

Bethel gets off a block and makes a tackle right at the LOS. Miami is playing assignment sound defense for the most part. (Not pictured)
Bandy gets off a Trevon Grimes block and tackles Perine before the can get the 1st down. I thought there was no way he was getting there.
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But then you gotta make this play on 4th down. They had him stopped. As a point of reference, Mullen is doing a much better job utilizing his chess piece (Toney) than Enos is with his (Thomas).
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Finley called for PI on this play when he’s knocking the hand away from the receiver pushing on him. As a reminder, face guarding is legal in college football, you do not have to turn and look for the football. Some truly poor officiating thus far.
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Frierson saved our backsides on this play. He was shot out of a cannon here and splits this block and beats #61 to the ballcarrier. If Frierson gets blocked it could be trouble because they had a pursuit blocker and a lead blocker in #7. Shaq did beat this block and had pursuit though.
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Have to make this play #15. You’re too talented to be letting guys get away this easily and get big yardage pickups.
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This gave me flashbacks to D’Onofrio. You can’t defend this play with this alignment and the QB just walks around the edge to the top of the screen for an easy 1st down. Miami needs to steal this play with the ease in which they picked this up. What made it so easy for them is they created so much space with the receivers up top rather than trying to bunch everything together.
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Two plays in-a-row Florida does an inside give and Miami misses tackles to bring up 3rd and short. This entire drive isn’t happening if Rousseau gets the pretty easy sack earlier. Little things add up to big things in games like this and it was apparent Miami simply wasn’t ready for the moment on this night. (Not pictured)

This is an awesome play design by Florida. They run the TE and slot up the seams, which holds the outside CB and the striker. They slip the RB behind the DE and the LB will never get there in time because of the TE running straight at the LB at the snap and holding him for a split second. Patchan tips this pass and Perine still gets it, so when UF fans talk about Brevin’s tip, remind them they got their own luck here.
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74 gets beaten like he stole something straight off the snap. He kind of ruins a decent looking play as well. This is an RPO and the LB’s are playing pass the entire way.
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Jarren showed some nice escapability here and I think he’s throwing it to Jordan, but Mallory sat down in his zone when his QB scrambled. Goes through Mallory’s hands or Jordan has a nice play and an easy 1st down. Miami can’t get out of their own way.
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Miami gets a penalty for 12-men in the huddle. Then Campbell jumps. This is tough to watch and I may need to simply speed this up. (Not pictured)
If you’re going to use a FB, he needs to be able to make this block on the Mike. Right at the 5-yard line Realus can make this block and Harris has a nice gain. Instead he whiffs and it goes for just a few yards.
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Knowles makes a nice tackle on the punt return. Then fills his gap and gets the RB down on 1st down. Headley has sucked as a punter thus far. (Not pictured)

Trevon Hill used his athleticism to get to the edge and the RB bobbled a pitch play and the Canes get the turnover. (Not pictured)

Yes, Tate playing so much at WR was surprising, but you can see it got Florida’s attention here. There were so few Florida defenders left in the box that Campbell and Scaife both pull and both take the same guy because there was no one for Scaife to take so he just hit the guy Campbell was engaged with. This run goes for 24 yards.
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Williams panics in the pocket here. He’s got a beautiful pocket if he just steps up a step. He literally runs into the back of his OL standing there. Hit somebody Scaife, look for work!
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It was at this moment that Ventrell Miller regretted the day he decided to buzz the flats on Cam’Ron Harris.
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Brevin, you have to catch this ball. There was a ton of hype and praise coming Brevin’s way after this game, and he had a pretty good game, but he’s one of the ones that needed to play better for Miami to win this game. Football comes down to who is going to make the most plays. Jarren Williams stands in there, evades pressure after his line folded immediately like a cheap suit (look at Gaynor knocked flat on his butt), finds a window, zips a dart to you on a critical 3rd down and this is you right here. This ball is in your hands and you just drop it. Make a play, playmakers.
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Knowles is going to take crap for this in the film room. He gets lifted and put on his backside right in the middle of the screen on the kickoff.
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I understand why you do it, Franks really took off as a player when he started using his legs last season, but I want Garvin hunting the QB, not standing there in the middle of the field doing nothing but being “in case” he runs. Gurvan Hall comes on a late SS blitz and it’s going to actually work because the secondary held up in 1-on-1 coverage. Your Sr. MLB needs to stay with his assignment here and stick with the RB. Instead he lets him go and the QB drops it off for a nice gain.
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Major hold that wasn’t called on Patchan that impacted the play as Patchan was set to make a TFL.
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Defense runs that same SS blitz again and Hall is trying to get there. Thankfully, Franks is pretty terrible and throws a “hospital ball” to the RB instead of taking either guy wide open in the middle of the field. Btw, this is what I want Garvin doing for my defense. Making LT’s look silly.
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Couple of plays and Miami gets a 1st down. Then Campbell jumps again. Just can’t have that stuff. (Not pictured)

Williams throws a nice little swing pass over the outstretched arms of Zuniga that goes in the books as a run because it was slightly backwards, but it was a nice spin by Thomas to get the yards. 14 more yards could be on Williams’ ledger from this game. (Not pictured)

Ball is in Jarren’s hands and Zion hasn’t moved out there. You can’t even see him because Donaldson is already standing up. It’s no wonder why he gets blown by on this play, but Harris, help your LT out. It’s clear as day that Zion is expecting the RB to chip the edge player on this play-action pass. Instead, Harris misses the edge and chips Zion and nearly knocks him down. Harley doesn’t block the S either and they meet at the QB. This was going to be a big play on a deep crosser to Osborn but didn’t have time.
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Campbell is absorbing blows far too often. Go hunting for contact on this pass play. Scaife, look for work! Hit somebody! Jarren does a great job of stepping up on this play and hitting Thomas on the square-in for a huge 3rd down conversion. This OL has to get meaner and start looking to bury 3-man rushes. This is frustrating to watch.
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I don’t know the play design, so I can’t speak to why, but you need someone to go attack the LB’s if you want your run game to work and not have Brevin doing whatever this is on this handoff. That’s an uncovered play-side LB reading a 7-yard deep handoff.
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Next play Campbell and Scaife do a pretty solid job of passing off a stunt and giving Williams time. He scrambles down the sideline and slides just short of a 1st down. Guess he was being smart, but go get me that 1st down. (Not pictured)

Gotta recognize this nickel blitzer sooner and update your protections. Dallas does come across and at least get in the way (he gets blown up) but if he flips Dallas to the other side, slides his protection right (to allow Scaife to be responsible for the inside shoulder of Campbell) you cover this up and give yourself protection. Gaynor doesn’t recognize the MLB blitz and crashes down, they double up top as well and the MLB has a free walk to the QB. Herbie says he held the ball too long but there was nothing to do except spin the opposite way, but that’s a tough move.
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The big screen to Dallas before halftime. Great catch. Gaynor getting out in front and making the key block. Donaldson misses his block here DeeJay breaks that tackle. This is an example of a playmaker making a play and was simply something Brevin and Thomas didn’t do enough of.
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Campbell holds on the next play and Jarren runs around and holds the ball for an eternity. You can rest assured the coaching staff will be speaking to Jarren about throwing the ball away in the next game. (Not pictured)

This is the throw that makes you salivate at the potential of Jarren Williams. Look at the muddied pocket he is trying to throw into. This is a throw that Franks has never thrown in his life and Jarren is in the first half of his first start. This was all arm talent and toughness to take the shot from both sides.
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Brutal.

Incredibly accurate, but brutal.

Keep your foot on the gas Lance!
 
I'll stick to the defense as offense has already been discussed quite a bit the last few days.

We came into the game saying "we can't let them run on us. We have to force Franks to beat us with his arm" and that's the exact gameplan they executed. Their running game was non-existent and outside of one play, the passing game was inconsistent and led to turnovers. If I'm going to nitpick, the tackling early in the game was pretty bad. I understand the long play to Toney should have been called back by multiple penalties but they still had numerous chances to get him to the ground and they floundered. Not sure if our corners are that good or if UF's passing game is just that bad but I can't really complain about the results from Bandy, Blades and the youngsters. Having Ivey back next week will only help. Safety play was spotty. Carter was generally very solid and played better than I thought he was going to. Hall had some mental errors and his tackling is not the greatest. Finley was the most consistent. The only time I saw #3 doing anything, he was getting beat. Defensive line executed pretty well. They were stout up the middle where some of us had concern and Patchan was probably the best player on defense all night. I know most people only notice linemen when they're making sacks or TFLs, but it was clear they altered the gameplan to contain the running game at the expense of negative plays and it worked well. If anything, they might have been a bit too run-sighted on some obvious passing downs and that led to them not getting significant pressure a few times so I'd like to see better knowledge of down/distance and offensive formations to know when to pin their ears back and when to play the running QB.

This game was literally one play away from being a win on multiple occasions despite the offensive line earning an F- and a freshman quarterback who was making reads way too slowly. Kind of went the way I expected minus the loss.
 
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The two INT returns were brutal, especially especially especially Carter’s 🤯🤯. I went absolutely berserk when he was tackled. Finley was begging him to come his way and it’s a wrap. We need to practice proper technique after an INT:

Always always hit the nearest sideline as fast as you can and take that path to the end zone unless it becomes blocked by defenders and that’s when u should always (attempt to) cross the field to the other sideline (holding the ball securely). The fastest u should run is when running to the initial sideline and to the other sideline if needed.

This was a collective loss no doubt, but if anyone is gonna mention names, no list should ever exclude Coach Enos by name. The night after the game he was receiving his proper share, but after his press conference the popular sentiment changed and it seems that certain players are getting it exclusively. A large and glaring portion of Lance’s criticism is on Enos as well.
 
@LanceRoffers one of the best you've done. Was going to rewatch game but now I don't have to.
 
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@Lance Roffers , I have a couple of follow-ups, some which might not have screenshots.

1. First play of the game - in addition to your comments about the play, I would love to see a screen shot of the end of the play, when Stiner (#13) comes flying in with a helmet-to-helmet hit that should have earned an ejection. The ref was right there and didn't call it, and you can see the players beginning to scuffle over it. Later in the same drive, there is another scuffle when Stiner makes a tackle out of bounds and keeps driving the ball carrier into the ground.

2. Gaytors first long TD - the hold against Bandy is egregious, it plays through three separate components. First, there is the initial engagement, where Jefferson begins to grab Bandy's jersey as Toney sets up in position to catch the pass. Next, Jefferson continues to hold Bandy's jersey as Bandy tries to get around Jefferson to cover Toney. Finally, as Toney turns upfield, Jefferson holds Bandy's jersey as Bandy tries to step inside to make the tackle. The video clearly shows Jefferson holding Bandy's jersey through all three phases, particularly the last bit, and the ref was right there. Our fans are fixated on the missed tackles, which should never have been an issue if the hold was called.

3. Gaytors second drive, no score due to turnover - I realize that the pass interference call on Finley did not result in any points being scored, but it was made worse (and foreshadow-y of our final pass at the end of the game) by the fact that the flag was thrown by the ref in the middle of the field, who was shielded from seeing the actual contact due to being behind Finley. Even worse, the sideline ref, who was wearing a Ref Cam, saw nothing wrong with the play as the players ran directly at him. Not sure why the ref in the middle of the field is overruling the sideline ref who was closer, had a better angle, and should have been expected to be the primary judge of the play, excluding any other context factors that another ref might have seen more clearly (such as whether the ball was uncatchable). I would love to see a screenshot of the play from the sideline angle.

4. Second half, first Gaytors drive - the pass interference call on Blades was wrong, but at least this time I don't have an objection as to who threw the flag. I disagree with his assessment, and if this was the only PI call that went poorly, I wouldn't care. But the hand-fighting call that went against us was also foreshadow-y (in a bad way) of our final pass of the game. It's the inconsistency, it was PI against Blades, but not at the end of the game.

5. Second half, first Miami drive - on the failed shovel pass, Davis comes in late and smacks Jarren in the head, almost knocking his helmet off. I have no problems with the second guy who hits Jarren, but the third guy (Davis) and the hit to the head should have been called by the refs.

6. Second half, second Miami drive - this is one of only two times where I disagree with you, as it relates to the holding call on Brevin Jordan. I have watched the play over and over again, and I just don't SEE Jordan holding. I agree with you that Jordan slipped and fell, but it truly looks like Zuniga's forward momentum simply got him tangled up with Jordan. I simply don't see Jordan's hands making the hold or Zuniga's jersey giving evidence of being held. I do agree with you on JT4's hold, but it would have put us in a much shorter yard situation than the Jordan hold.

7. Amari Carter interception - I agree with you, if Carter cuts to the sidelines, he probably scores. I think you suggested that he slow down and let his pursuit overrun him, but I think a quick dart to the outside would have worked as well.

8. Fake FG holding call - This is the second point of disagreement that I have. I simply don't see the hold here. Mallory makes a specific point to NOT make contact with either of the two guys lined up across from him at the beginning of the fake, then he engages a third defender a couple of yards downfield. While the camera is behind Mallory, it looks like he has good outside leverage at all times during the block. In particular, Mallory raises his left hand during most of the block, to emphasize that the block is legal. If you can show a screenshot of Mallory's upraised hand, I definitely think that he is doing everything to show and perform a clean block. Later in the same drive, when the ball was thrown to Jeff Thomas in the end zone, it certainly looked like Henderson could have/should have been called for pass interference.

9. Miami drive AFTER the missed FG - I'm not sure why we didn't attempt a 47 yard FG here, we had nearly 5 minutes of clock and 2 TOs, we had defended the run very well all night, the Gaytors were averaging less than 2 yards per carry at that point. If we make it a one point game, we can stop the clock twice on defense and then get into position to win the game on a FG.

10. Finley's interception - again, could have scored a touchdown if he just cut to the sideline, and then presumably the unsportsmanlike penalty on Blades would have been enforced on the extra point of the kickoff.

11. All of the pass interference on the final drive - at this point in the game, with the clock and yardage and Florida's successful pass rush, it is fairly obvious that Grantham was coaching his guys to take the 15 yard pass interference penalty rather than allow longer completions. Now, admittedly, the first call was ridiculous, it was 4th and 34 and the play would likely have not resulted in a first down. So this supports the concept that Grantham coached the team to take PI, and that the DB just lost sight of the fact that it was 4th and 34 and that a clean reception and tackle would have ended the game. The second pass interference was obvious as well. But at that point, when the refs have called 2 pass interference penalties, you could tell that their ****s were going to shrivel if they called anymore PI and let Miami win the game on multiple defensive penalties. The pass interference call that should have been made on the Mallory call was very reminiscent of the call that was made against Henderson when he hit Brevin Jordan high around the shoulders and head. The Mallory play was very similar, and you can even see Mallory's helmet being pushed in a way which hindered his ability to see the ball. Finally, the last pass interference on the final pass to Jordan actually WAS called by the sideline ref (wearing the ref cam), but then was apparently overruled by the ref in the middle of the field who was farther away. This play was significant beyond the fact that it would have given us first and goal, it also involves the same kind of hand fighting that WAS called pass interference against Al Blades earlier in the half, and it was the second time that the ref in the middle of the field got involved when his proximity and angle were not as good as the sideline ref's (same as the first half PI call on Finley). To make matters worse, there is no "replay review" for PI in college, and the inside ref should never have overruled the sideline judge when it comes to JUDGEMENT. Now, if the ref in the middle helped out on "uncatchable", that would have been different. I can't imagine what the second ref told the first ref to cause the first ref to conclude "yeah, I didn't see what I just saw."



Look, I'm not one of those "blame the refs" or "blame one play" kind of guys. There were plenty of terrible calls and plenty of terrible plays, though, any one of which would have led to Miami winning the game.
 
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@Lance Roffers, check out the bomb play again. Because of the ball placement (toward) middle of the field, if Carter's truly single high on that play, then his alignment is F'd. Because he's playing too close to the Canes sideline, almost as the ball were on the left hash and he'd be the boundary Safety.

Instead, the ball is in the middle of the field, the WR to the bottom of screen (Canes sideline) has outside release on Blades, and Frierson gets beat (to the inside) immediately a few yards outside the opposite hash. That puts Carter in position to essentially cover 30+ yards between the vertical routes. On a ball that never hung. He definitely has range issues, as we all know, but perhaps a handful of athletes could have gotten there, and they would have needed a better read on the play (Carter holds his drop and waits till Franks is basically releasing to break toward the slot's vertical).

Tough play because of so many things. I'd start with his alignment. Then a bunch of stuff happened against us - Frierson gets smoked (it happens), Franks gets enough time (why), Franks throws a great ball (kind of a miracle), the ball never hangs, and the WR finger tips it in full sprint.

I think they try that play 100 more times and maybe hit it 10% of the time.

Swagger jack on line 3.... Let Lance have his shine
 
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@Lance Roffers, check out the bomb play again. Because of the ball placement (toward) middle of the field, if Carter's truly single high on that play, then his alignment is F'd. Because he's playing too close to the Canes sideline, almost as the ball were on the left hash and he'd be the boundary Safety.

Instead, the ball is in the middle of the field, the WR to the bottom of screen (Canes sideline) has outside release on Blades, and Frierson gets beat (to the inside) immediately a few yards outside the opposite hash. That puts Carter in position to essentially cover 30+ yards between the vertical routes. On a ball that never hung. He definitely has range issues, as we all know, but perhaps a handful of athletes could have gotten there, and they would have needed a better read on the play (Carter holds his drop and waits till Franks is basically releasing to break toward the slot's vertical).

Tough play because of so many things. I'd start with his alignment. Then a bunch of stuff happened against us - Frierson gets smoked (it happens), Franks gets enough time (why), Franks throws a great ball (kind of a miracle), the ball never hangs, and the WR finger tips it in full sprint.

I think they try that play 100 more times and maybe hit it 10% of the time.

Baker mentioned today that Carter wasn't aligned properly. Just so many mistakes by guys in their first starts. Gotta get this stuff cleaned up.
 
Swagger jack on line 3.... Let Lance have his shine
Not at all, man. Ha. Lance is the man. I don't even usually do my breakdowns because his video and image-based reviews are simply better. I've stated so. This was just a topic that crossed over 2 separate threads.
 
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