iPhone Joins the 21st Century! (MMS)

I just received the following text message on my iPhone:

AT&T Free Msg: Pic/video msg (MMS) is now available for iPhone.  Pic/video msgs you send/receive will be $.30 unless you have a msg plan.  Go to att.com/mywireless to add a plan.  To enable MMS, connect iPhone to computer & click Check for Update in iTunes, then restart iPhone.  Reply stop to end mktg msgs.

I don’t think they could’ve worded that in a more confusing fashion.  For those worried you are getting up-charged for MMS, don’t worry, you aren’t as long as you have any form of text messaging plan, which I would assume just about any cell phone user these days has.  Each MMS is going to be just like a single text and nothing more.

All I can say is: It’s about freakin’ time AT&T.

Some Shameless Self-Promotion

If you remember, recently I made a post about being a part of a fantasy football panel on DallasProSports.com, which has now gone to a weekly appearance.  Starting this week, I will be writing yet another weekly article for them as well.  My focus will be a week-by-week breakdown of the so-called “Romo Friendly” offense.  I’ll be looking at the play call balance as well as how effective it seems to be working for the Cowboys and Romo.

I don’t have the exact days that I will be published there as of yet; however, I will be sure to update with a link here (possibly with a more in-depth breakdown of other Cowboy happenings if I have the time).

On that same note, if you have Twitter, you can follow DallasProSports.com and get their feed of website updates (which will include my articles and fantasy panel updates) and other sports news from the Dallas area.  You can also follow my Twitter feed to get updates for this blog as well as other random things that I find amusing (as well as random commentary, especially during ND/Cowboy games).

Hopefully in some near future I will soon be able to overhaul this site and make it a little bit better than it currently stands now.  I’ve got a bunch of ideas; however, the free time is lacking as of now.  Considering I’m already behind on actual blog entries, I wouldn’t expect to see any major changes anytime soon; however, I might have the time to plug some things in here and there.

So there you go, my shameless self-promotion for the day.  Now time to get back to work on things you might care a little bit more about like breaking down the ND/MSU game and previewing the ND/Purdue game.  Being behind is fun!

A Quick Word on the Texas Rangers

I’m going to take a break from football for a second and throw some Ranger talk your way.  No, I haven’t forgotten about the team; in fact, I’ve still be religiously watching/listening to the games.  I’ve found that football tends to be easier to keep a schedule to write about as you have a clear week to week progression.  For someone that doesn’t have all the time in the world to write, it is perfect for me.  So if you are wondering where I’ve been on the Rangers, believe me, I’m tuned in, just not blogging religiously about it.

Jamey Newberg I am not.

When I do write, it is because something rather big has happened, the team makes some big moves, or I feel like something simply needs to be said about the team.  Today is one of those days where the latter comes into play.

Yes, we are on a horrible stretch of baseball right now.  We are in all likelihood not going to make the playoffs; in fact, after this weekend, all doubt could be removed from that situation.  This weekend we face off against the Angels, whom we are now 6 games behind (6.5 behind Boston in the Wild Card).  We have 7 games left against the Angels, so all hope isn’t quite lost yet.  We have owned them this season and we could very well make up the ground if we step up in a huge way.

However, if it doesn’t happen, we shouldn’t be jumping off a bridge by any means.

I’m a big fan of throwing stats around, especially for baseball.  Today though, I only want to give you one: 80-65.  That would be the Rangers’ current win-loss record.  That is 15 games over .500.  That is something we all would’ve died for at the beginning of the season.

Bottom line: We’ve seen some damned good baseball in 2009.

Tuesday night, I was asked by a friend of mine, after I complained about the current state of the Rangers game on at the bar: “Why do the Rangers suck now?”  The short answer is that they really don’t so much “suck” as it just looks like they’ve hit a wall.

The Rangers have had quite a few obstacles to overcome this season.  They’ve been hit hard financially for one.  While I don’t believe that affected a trade for Halladay (I don’t think we wanted to pay the price as far as actual players go), it has stopped us from doing a couple of other things: picking anyone up at the trading deadline of worth, not being able to afford claiming Scott Khazmir off of waivers, and not being able to sign our top draft pick.  Our biggest move was bringing Pudge back, and while I like the move, it was bargain basement.

This team has also been dependent on tons of young players.  Take a look up and down the roster and start looking for real experience, there isn’t a whole lot.  Mike Bacsik on the Ticket’s Diamond Talk made a great point after last night’s game.  These young players have been brought up out of necessity for the most part and not because they have proven themselves.  Tommy Hunter might be an exception to this rule, as he was an afterthought, but due to how well he did in his spot start and in AAA, he was brought back up.  Holland was the golden boy and we were looking for an excuse to bring him up, despite having even little minor league experience.  Feliz was much of the same.  Elvis Andrus got tossed straight into the fire.  I could go on and on.

Young players will almost always struggle.  Just look at Chris Davis.  He was easily our first basemen of the future last season and this season people wanted him to never see the big league roster ever again this season.  Holland is having all kinds of issues now as well.  That isn’t to say these players won’t be great in another year or two, but the growing pains happen.

You also have to throw on top of everything that the Rangers have been playing great ball and they’ve been seeing two things.  The first is that the two teams ahead of them just refuse to lose.  The second is that the crowds have been absolutely lackluster despite the quality of baseball being played.  Now, I know there are several reasons for the crowd: the economy sucks, people hate Tom Hicks, the Ballpark is in freakin’ Arlington, and the games are starting at 7pm instead of the usual 7:30pm.  And of course, football has started too and this is most definitely a football town.

So you throw all that together, add in the fact that Millwood has been awful as of late and the offense can’t seem to score at all, and you are going to see a losing streak.  However, this is not “oh the Rangers suck again” or “here we go again, we can’t hold it together” in the least.  This has been one of the best seasons of baseball we’ve seen in a long time, and not only that, this time around it was fueled by pitching and defense.  Plus it was fueled by young players that will be the future of this franchise.

If you want to place any kind of worry on the Rangers, place it on the financial side.  MLB basically owns us right now and is handcuffing our ability to do anything.  That is the real shame — and no MLB isn’t to blame, it is Hicks for getting himself in this much financial trouble.  If this team doesn’t sell to someone soon, we could see all kinds of awful fallout like not being able to resign Byrd and even team president Nolan Ryan whose contributions to the Rangers have been nothing short of amazing.  If there is anything that “sucks” with the Rangers, look no further than the bottom line.

This team though deserves all the credit in the world for what they did this year, and they could still pull on last rabbit out of the hat before the season is over.  So don’t get down on them.  Continue the support, make it out to the games if you can (believe me, I’m personally in the boat of can’t afford/can’t make the drive with my schedule, I know it isn’t easy), and keep your heads up about the results of the season.

It ain’t over ’till it’s over.

Beat L.A.

Post Mortem: ND/Michigan

While the picture is somewhat in jest, it more or less describes my thoughts as soon as I saw Clausen throw to Tate and then later throw to Evans. It was one of those things that just gave me a sinking feeling that somehow those two over-aggressive calls would come back and bite us.

And bite us they did.

However, that is not the only reason the Irish lost Saturday’s game. There were several miscues by the whole team, questionable coaching decisions (outside of the final drive), and a few other odds and ends that make me worry about this team a bit. Notice, I said nothing about the referees (and yes, I, like Weis, do believe it was simply awful). As I said before, great teams don’t worry about miscues from the referee, they find ways to overcome them.

Before I go much further, as this post isn’t going to be very bright and sunshiny, let’s get one more point very clear. This is only the second game of the season. While this loss is a huge gut-punch/kick to the nether region, the Irish still have a very favorable schedule remaining, including the all-important showdown with USC. It is not out of the question for this team to rebound and, with this schedule, go 10-2 or 11-1.

With all that being said, it is time to break this mess of a game down, lay it to rest, and get ready to beat the tar out of Michigan State.

The Force is Strong with This One

What? Don’t look at me like that, it isn’t like I’m the only one making up ridiculous puns with Forcier’s name.

Anyways, you simply can’t break this game down without giving Forcier some major recognition for the work he did against Notre Dame: 23-33, 240 yards, 2 TD, 1 INT as well as 70 rushing yards on 13 attempts and a rushing TD. And of course one of those rushes includes a 4th down conversion that went for 31 yards and a TD.

To say the kid was good is an understatement.

One of my biggest wonders was why the defense continually did not respect his running ability. It seemed (especially on the aforementioned 4th down play) that we never had a true “spy” on him the whole game. Even if we did have someone ready to tackle him, it looked like no one was prepared for him to have any juking ability at all as well.

ND definitely did not respect Forcier at all in this one and it cost them big.

More Reasons for Running the Ball

I promise I won’t dwell on the “why in the hell are we passing now” aspect of the end of the game for too long. One of the things I neglected to mention in my previous post though was that ND had 155 yards rushing in the game and Allen had 139 of those yards on 21 carries — that would be 6.6 yards/carry.

In fact on the first play of the now infamous drive, Allen had a run for 13 yards, then was pulled, and Hughes came in and went nowhere fast on his only carry of the game. Then came the passing attempts.

Now, I’m sure the 13 yard run didn’t completely gas Allen…so why were we not running him again? If they are selling out in the box, throw a pitch, have Allen stretch the play as far to the sideline as he can and kill some clock and make Michigan use timeouts. Even if you can’t get the first down, you kill about 10 seconds and make Michigan use both timeouts.

Those 10 seconds would’ve been huge considering Michigan scored with 11 seconds left…I’m pretty sure a field goal would’ve been attempted in that time instead.

Special Issues

As if the ending drive didn’t have awful play calling, Maust sure didn’t help issues with his 28 yard punt. His previous three punts all go for 40+ and in the most crucial part of the game you choke and shank the one that really matters. Simply awful.

But it doesn’t stop there. After Allen’s TD got overturned and the Irish come out of the drive with a FG, the kickoff coverage, which was the best in the nation last year, completely broke down and gives up a TD return. That entire sequence was an 11 point swing in about a minute. Those are the kind of mistakes that come back and bite you square in the rear.

Tausch also got a case of the freshmen jitters in his first FG attempt as well. While at the time it was easy to shake off, those 3 points sure would’ve helped late in the game.

No Focus?

Probably the most disturbing thing that came out of this game though occurred via post-game comments by Eric Olsen:

Center Eric Olsen said he saw problems as early as last Tuesday, and told the team that after the game.

“I told them, ‘Reflect back on practice.’ We had a little bit of a sloppy practice on Tuesday and even on Wednesday. I think that translates into the game. We had a bunch of penalties that really hurt us in key moments. I think it just goes right back to early practice,” he said.

The team wasn’t focused enough at practice last week, Olsen said.

“I think guys kind of ease their mind, trying to survive practice, just get through it. It’s just another practice. But we’ve got to use every rep in practice as a way to get better. Obviously it translates directly into the game,” he said. “It’s painful because we know what we can do this year.”

Which really begs two questions: First, was everyone getting big heads and a bad case of overconfidence? And second, why in the world does no team leader step up and say something before the game and instead light a fire under everyone during practice?

I would like to think such a problem would be readily noticeable to the team leaders, but apparently that wasn’t the case at all. To extend on this point, where were the coaches crawling all over the team when focus wasn’t being had?

There are times getting a slice of humble pie can be good for a team, but there are also times when you can very much avoid ever having a slice served to you. From Olsen’s quotes, it seems like this issue could’ve been readily avoided.

The lack of focus most definitely showed throughout the game though. 18 penalties for 150 yards is absolutely inexcusable no matter how bad you think the refs are (just as reference Michigan had 10 for 90 yards, they were getting flagged as well). Mental lapses like that is what causes you to lose a football game in which you win the time of possession and overall yardage battles.

Seeing ND’s first turnover in their first drive in the second half wasn’t such a great sight either. That shoots yourself completely in the foot and the Irish seemed to have loads of trouble recovering as the third quarter was simply awful.

Tate also seemed to leave his hands on the sidelines on quite a few crucial passes as well.

Some Bright Spots

I need to attempt to end this entry on a somewhat positive note as there were some things that the Irish did very well.

First off, let’s start with the O-Line. Another solid performance allowing ND to have their first 100 yard rushing game by a RB since the Duke game in 2007. They also allowed zero sacks.

While the defense didn’t have their best performance in the world, they still managed to get two sacks in the game. Despite the fact Michigan adjusted well to Tenuta’s schemes in the second half, at least we are actually seeing blitzes hit home unlike last season. I have a feeling that against more traditional offenses, we will see much better results.

Even though Clausen had a couple of passes here and there that were awful decisions (often in the face of a blitz), he still passed for over 300 yards and had 3 TDs. He is far from perfect, but the progression is definitely there. If he can continue to make smart decisions with the football, he will still be a major force to recon with this season.

Looking Ahead

While my preview for the ND/MSU game will come in another day or so, I do think one point needs to be made. The Irish must use this game to rebound and rebound big. MSU has had far too much success when playing at ND and that needs to stop — especially since they are coming off of a loss to freakin’ Central Michigan. Of course if this past week isn’t enough motivation for ND to destroy MSU, this should be:

It Needs to Be Said

I’m already seeing a lot of excuses flying around via Twitter and Facebook — mainly those focused on referees. I’ve also seen a few comments that despite the loss, ND still had a good showing. With these two thoughts in mind, the following needs to be said:

The difference between a good/decent team and a great team is that the great teams overcome the adversities laid before them, whether it be a blown call, a bad bounce, or a hostile crowd. Attempting to blame this loss on a missing two seconds or an early overturned TD is a fruitless exercise.

I could do all the analysis in the world on this game, but in the end, it all boils down to the simple fact that ND was in the position that any team would want to be in during a game: in the lead and possession of the ball with very little time on the clock. You are in full control of the game at that point.

I can even understand the reason for wanting to pass in said situation. The defense is clearly expecting a run and will sell out for it and a pass can easily seal the deal. That is, if it is the right kind of pass.

You don’t throw a jump ball in the air to show this aggression. You run a play fake, make the defense bite and look for the open man, if he isn’t there, the QB runs or takes the sack. More important than the result of the play is the fact that the clock keeps running. The jump ball is not a “safe pass that we’ve been hitting all day” as Weis said in the presser. It is a gamble, and one that doesn’t need to be taken that late in the game no matter how many times you’ve “hit” it.

You don’t throw passes twice in a row either, much less again, something like a timing route with a true freshmen. Weis may like to claim it “was just a little bit off”, but that little bit off was a bigger difference in the game than the missing two seconds.

There are several other aspects of the game I could bring up in which the Irish blew their chances (and where Weis had awful play calling), but all that matters is how you finish sometimes. You must force your opponent’s hand when you can, not give them gifts of what amount to either a full minute or two timeouts saved.

I have defended Weis several times before, but I absolutely cannot here. The way we lost the game is easily a fireable offense. Moreover, going into a presser and then saying when your gamble backfired on second down and being faced with a third and long is a matter of deciding “whether or not you are trying to win the game or play it safe” and using that as justification for the poor third down call is even worse. Weis, I don’t know what planet you are on right now, but what I saw was neither trying to win the game nor playing it safe.

Simply put we handed the game away.

Anyone remember us coming back on MSU in the fourth quarter because they decided to try to “win the game” and pass? Guess what, we are on the other end now because of the same thing. We were laughing at MSU then, and guess what Michigan is doing now.

This was not a good showing by the team. The defense had a chance to close the game down several times. The offense executed poorly in several areas of the game. The coaching by Weis was simply awful.

This is not a good day to be Irish.