Thursday, September 10, 2009

game preview: TCU


Date/Time: September 12, 3:30 PM

TV: ESPNUVA

Last matchup: UVA 20, TCU 10 (1994 Independence Bowl)

Last week: never happened. You hear me? That never happened!

Line: TCU by 11.5

TCU blogs: Mountain West Connection (actually it's an MWC-in-general blog but they had to pick a team affiliation to get into the Blogpoll and TCU was what they picked so whatever.)

Injury report:

OUT: CB Mike Parker, WR Bobby Smith

DOUBTFUL: QB Vic Hall, WR Dontrelle Inman, OT Lamar Milstead, LB Billy Schautz

QUESTIONABLE: None

PROBABLE: DE Nate Collins, WR Patch Duda, NT Nick Jenkins, QB Jameel Sewell, WR Matt Snyder, TE Joe Torchia

Vic Hall arrrggghhh. There'd been word of him getting banged up last week but it is not cool to see him listed as doubtful. You have to figure that Sewell will start given the (probably excessive) faith the coaches showed but also given that he's also on the injury report and, you know, the three interceptions, he'll be on a short leash and we'll see quite a bit of Marc Verica.

HOW WE CAN WIN:

- For the love of Christ and pizza, do not turn over the football seven times. Obviously.

- The tackles have to be excellent. TCU's Jerry Hughes is the nation's fourth-best draft-eligible DE according to the Coiffed One, Mel Kiper. He's got the potential to really blow up our offense even without our help.

- Stop turning over the football. I mean it.

- The linebackers need to continue to improve. For the most part, they did a good job containing W&M's ground game last week, but R.J. Archer hurt us on the ground. Now there's another running quarterback to deal with: TCU's Andy Dalton was their third-leading rusher last year and this is on a team with the rare quality of having had more rushing yards than passing yards. There's only three linemen and they can only do so much. It's on the linebackers to turn eight-yard scrambles into two-yard scrambles.

- I said stop turning over the damn football.

HOW WE CAN LOSE

- Do everything this week just like last week.

- Especially play offense. The passing was really, really bad, but the ground game was pathetic. Take away Hall's touchdown run and we averaged 2.5 yards a carry. We will get blown the hell up out of the water if we play offense like that, and TCU just so happens to have had the best defense in the country last year. They allowed 1.7 yards a carry. We absolutely will not score if Gregg Brandon can't figure something out. Big goose egg.

- That's really all there is to it. I'm a little worried about Dalton's ability to run, but their offense overall isn't world-beatingly scary. But our offense is, and not in the can-beat-you-so-many-ways sense. More like, Frankenstein-on-ecstasy scary.

HOW THE GAME WILL GO

Well, hell. I can't look much stupider than I did last week, can I? So what the heck, I think we keep this game close. Not to say we win, no. But we should be able to pull some kind of a lame-o moral victory out of this. The TCU defense is too strong and our offense has serious issues that go beyond the turnovers. And don't count out the Al Groh magic. It's not like he hasn't been here before. The guy knows a million different ways to infuriate the fan base, and a million and one ways to wiggle out of a tight spot. If we get blown out, which is eminently possible, that will be a bigger warning sign than last week was, because it'll be decisive proof that last week was no fluke. But a tight game, even if it's a loss, should give us reason enough to continue deluding ourselves that the ACC season still hasn't started and we still have enough time to turn it around and yadda yadda.

REST OF THE ACC

Clemson at Georgia Tech, going on right now

Wake Forest vs. Stanford, 12:00
Duke at Army, 12:00
North Carolina at Connecticut, 12:00
Virginia Tech vs. Marshall, 1:30
Boston College vs. Kent State, 2:00
NC State vs. Murray State, 6:00
Maryland vs. James Madison, 6:00
Florida State vs. Jacksonville State, 6:00

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

ACC roundtable

OK, folks, time for round 2 of the ACC roundtable. Today's questions are brought to us by College Game Balls, an excellent if overly maroon-and-orange footballin' blog. Here goes' nothing.

1. *Ding Dong* The pizza man is here, did your team deliver what you expected in their opener, why or why not?

ROFLCOPTER

2. The ACC was downright pathetic in week one. Which display of ineptitude shocked you the most? Going forward is there hope for the conference?

I've sort of cheated and already have seen a lot of answers, and our W&M fiasco is a pretty unanimous choice. Why buck tradition? The positive spin is that obviously people had us pegged as at least presentable if they're shocked by our failing to be so, and they're not shocked that Duke lost so I guess that's something.

The problem is that it's been a favorite saying of mine that no team in the ACC would be the best in any other conference, but seven or eight teams in the ACC would be third-best in any conference. It gets harder to say that when two teams fall to I-AA squads, one shits the bed on national TV against a middling SEC team, one shits the bed against a decent Pac-10 squad, and yet another gets beat at home by a middling-to-lousy Big 12 team. It was an equal opportunity bedshitting all around, and yeah, if I were an outside observer I'd probably fall right back on the stick-to-basketball stereotype, having been handed a lot of evidence just now.

3. After the show they put on Monday night, Atlantic bloggers is FSU the team to beat and what about Miami, Coastalites?

I'm still on the Georgia Tech bandwagon in the Coastal.

4. You've been granted one curse, other than your opponent pick one team you would like to see lose in week 2.

I don't know if this is supposed to be inside or outside the ACC. Inside, I'll take Maryland for all the schadenfreudey goodness of watching a rival join the ranks of I-AA dog chow. Then we can argue back and forth about whether JMU or W&M is the better team. Outside, as also a Michigan fan, then Notre Dame, obviously. Or is that cheating? If so, then Boise State to Miami of Ohio, so as to remove one candidate from the pooooor little screwed over mid-major pool that the playoff freaks always rally around every year.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

the recruit: Rijo Walker

Name: Rijo Walker
Position: CB
Hometown: Hampton
School: Bayside
Height: 5'10"
Weight: 170

ESPN: 75, three stars, #56 CB
Rivals: 5.5, three stars
Scout: three stars, #67 CB

Rijo committed at just exactly the wrong time as far as me finishing up this post is concerned. What with racing to finish all the previews before the season started, and then getting all out of sorts over Saturday's debacle, I damn near forgot about it. But here we are.

Anyway, the one thing that's different about Walker from most of our other recruits, especially on defense, is that the scouting services are all mostly in agreeance about him. And the offers bear that out, too - our main competition here was West Virginia and South Carolina, and mostly South Carolina. Sometimes you can ignore most of what the gurus have to say (ahem Kevin Parks), but in this case, they're probably pretty reliable. He likely gets a little bit of a downgrade because of his size (he's rather generously listed at 5'10", and even that's a tad on the short side for a cornerback.) I choose to ignore that when it comes to, say, Chris Brathwaite, who I'm irrationally excited about. You can do that with linebackers and running backs and such. Not so much with cornerbacks.

Walker's high school resume is fairly typical. Standout player, of course. 11 interceptions as a sophomore, which was helped by having a senior on the other side that teams were avoiding. When he became the player they avoided, the number dropped to four. No academic issues. Runs track. Kind of a prospect-in-a-can, but that's not meant to be a knock: Walker represents some stability and predictability in a recruiting class that badly needs some. This is going to be a weak-looking class on paper, and could end up a complete bust or a smash hit. Getting a solid, and just as importantly, instate player from a school where we seem to be establishing a good relationship (Jontel Evans is also from Bethel) is vital for both this class and future classes.

As for actual on-the-field stuff, Walker's even more important. Do you know how long it's been since we recruited a for-real, actual cornerback? Not picking one up last year was a mistake. In 2010, this could easily go from a major strength to a major weakness: if Dowling leaves, there's no real heir apparent to start across from Minnifield. Cornerback is not where you want to start a true freshman, but Walker could push for playing time that early just on lack of competition alone, and he should be a starter probably sooner than most of this class.

blogpoll ballot revised

Thanks to Miami, I have to revise my ballot. Revision below. Yes, I'm aware Miami is still below Florida State. As always, you're encouraged to set me straight as needed.

RankTeamDelta
1Florida
2Alabama 1
3Texas 1
4Southern Cal
5Utah
6Georgia Tech 1
7Penn State 1
8Oklahoma State 3
9Oklahoma 3
10California 2
11Ohio State 1
12Boise State 3
13Virginia Tech 4
14Mississippi 1
15Brigham Young 8
16North Carolina 3
17TCU 3
18Pittsburgh 3
19Georgia 2
20Florida State 6
21Clemson 1
22LSU 4
23Oregon State 1
24Miami (Florida)
25Notre Dame
Last week's ballot

Dropped Out: Oregon (#16), Iowa (#25).

Monday, September 7, 2009

weekend review

Besides the obvious, I mean. If there's a kind of listless tone to this post, just, you know, read below to find out why.

I guess we'll start with soccer, they spent their weekend productively at least. Two wins out in Portland lend some confidence that they really were just kinda messing around in the exhibition season. Will Bates is already coming in handy, slamming home a goal early in the second half against Portland to make sure they didn't get any uppity ideas about a comeback. Tony Tchani and Ross LaBauex swept offensive and defensive MVP awards. All in all a successful trip. No time to fool around: the ACC season kicks off right away with the Duke game on Friday.

There isn't any recruiting board update, so instead I fixed up the depth chart. With Keith Payne off the team I made the assumption that his scholarship gets handed to Patrick Slebonick. Injured players are denoted, and the starters and backups are now basically correct, although it ought to be pointed out that just because someone's not on the nominal two-deep doesn't mean they don't play. Especially at wide receiver.

The future's a lot more exciting than the present right now, so here's what the recruits are up to:
TYLER BROSIUS: Getting back on track this week with four touchdowns - two running, two passing - in a 35-14 win.

ADRIAN GAMBLE (2011): Didn't figure in Independence's 35-32 win.

E.J. SCOTT: Good Counsel opened their season in California with a 28-16 win, but Scott didn't play.

PABLO ALVAREZ: Couldn't find any game details for Alvarez's game this weekend, only the score - his team lost. Instead here's some Alvarez fluff for you.

OK, so we lost. Wasn't a good week for the ACC in general, to be honest. The only teams that won were playing I-AA patsies (or Sun Belt teams) and not even all the teams that were playing said patsies even managed to win. Time for a spin around the ACC blogs to see how they felt about things.

NC State was the opening act for the second year in a row, and for the second year in a row shat the bed. State Fans Nation says the following:
South Carolina was bigger than NC State. South Carolina was faster than NC State. South Carolina was better coached than NC State. South Carolina had three
trips to the red zone. NC State had ZERO. It was amazing that this game was even close.
Tell it like it is, man. If there's one consolation about losing to a I-AA team it's that it wasn't the very first game of the season with the entire nation watching because they're starved for football.

Georgia Tech dropped 37 on Jacksonville State, but From the Rumble Seat is feeling left out of the pity party and isn't impressed with the Jackets' performance anyway.

Boston College's offense scored 45 points on Northeastern. Eagle in Atlanta thinks that's a B+ effort. Despite the BC fanhood, apparently the blog is written by my freshman year computer science prof. At this point I'd hand Jameel Sewell a B+ if he learned which color jersey his receivers wear.

Wake Forest lost to Baylor, which I kind of think says "Baylor's decent" at least as much as it says, "wow, Wake sucks."

Block-C is just as unimpressed about their win as FTRS is about theirs.

Duke lost to Richmond, and it's a shame there's no Duke blog so I can go find someone equally miserable. Normally Dookies would just say "wait til basketball season" but Cutcliffe is causing expectations, which are not met by losing to Richmond.

VT didn't help the ACC's cause, and Gobbler Country has seen it all before and it depresses him. "We are the same team we were last season." I BET THAT SUCKS.

Testudo Times is another blogger handing out grades for his team. The only difference between that and BC is Maryland got completely trucked. The grades remain pretty much the same. This is more like my astronomy professor, whose grading saved my ass and my grade point that semester from my computer science prof.

stuck on denial

Being a fan of two teams can be a little strange. Especially when the two teams follow eerily similar paths through the college football journey of destiny. Maybe when you have two favorites, it's near-impossible not to create parallels in your head, but over the past couple years, they've jumped out like a Magic Eye puzzle. You don't have to squint to see them, you just sort of.....unfocus, and there they are. This offseason more so than ever. Both teams making a radical shift to a spread offense. Both teams with high hopes for that offense and paper-thin defenses. Both teams with coaches on something of a hot seat, and both teams with three quarterbacks with the coaches saying all three will take snaps.

Some of these similarities are of the highly undesirable sort. Neither team has beaten its end of season rival since 2003, for example. Neither team went bowling last year. And now, there's yet another concurrence between the fates of these two teams. One that I was hoping never to have to see again.

Terminally ill patients are said to go through five stages of grief. "Terminally ill" is a pretty good way to describe a season opener in which your team was not expected to be good and looked worse. Anger's over with. There's also denial. I like denial. Let's roll with denial for a bit. Not to pretend it never happened, but we'll ignore the obvious fallout from the game and not go down the path of "how long does Al Groh have?" That's played out before it even begins. Anyone hoping for a diatribe on Groh's coaching is going to be disappointed, and frankly, you did it to yourselves. Here we are, finally legitimately wondering if this is the end of the line, and already it's gotten stale because that question got brought up years too soon. If that happens this season, then it happens, but there's no sense worrying about it quite yet because it's certainly not going to happen before next week.

In fact, let's take denial a step further. No, the season isn't toast, and I'll tell you why: seven turnovers. I think the defense acquitted itself OK and had we not turned the ball over seven times, the general theme would be "the offense needs to improve but the defense looks good." (In other words, a watered-down version of the theme of last year's Richmond game.) The 16 points off turnovers turned a really lame win into a horrible loss. I'm willing to bet we don't commit seven turnovers in a game for another four years.

That said, the offense does need to get better, turnovers or no. How that will be, I have no idea. It'd be nice to start by figuring out who the quarterback is going to be. It's pretty obvious what the pecking order was to start the game: Sewell, Hall, Verica. Having already thrown two interceptions, the coaches had enough confidence in Sewell to let him go out there and throw another one. In fact, I'd say a lot of our preconceived notions about the quarterbacks came absolutely true, mostly on the pessimistic side. Verica can't really run the ball. Hall can't really throw it. Sewell can do either but not especially well - the wax paper was out yet again in full force. The season isn't lost, but it's going to be very soon if a quarterback doesn't step up.

One can only hope the similarities between Michigan and Virginia don't stop any time soon. You may recall that Michigan put together a respectable 9-4 season after losing to a I-AA team. History says anything's possible: you may also recall that Jameel Sewell threw two interceptions in a 23-3 loss to Wyoming on that same September day in 2007, and that season turned out OK too. This is what people call "grasping at straws," but what else is there to do?

Sunday, September 6, 2009

week 1 blogpoll ballot

Here's the preliminary ballot for Week 1. Yes, I know that the games aren't even over yet. I'll revise based on the outcome as necessary.

Some sort of game recap coming just as soon as I stop pretending it didn't happen.

RankTeamDelta
1Florida
2Alabama 1
3Texas 1
4Southern Cal
5Utah
6Georgia Tech 1
7Penn State 1
8Oklahoma State 3
9Oklahoma 3
10California 2
11Ohio State 1
12Boise State 3
13Virginia Tech 4
14Mississippi 1
15Brigham Young 8
16Florida State 2
17North Carolina 2
18TCU 2
19Pittsburgh 2
20Georgia 3
21Clemson 1
22LSU 4
23Oregon State 1
24Notre Dame
25Nebraska
Last week's ballot

Dropped Out: Oregon (#16), Iowa (#25).

Minimal explanation needed here: it's last week's ballot, shuffled as appropriate based on this week's results. We're still sort of in preseason mode, in that until teams have enough of a resume to go on, you just sort of assume the teams are about as good as you thought they were and adjust based on what happened.

A couple notes:

- Washington was 0-12 last year. I warned last week that LSU would get dinged if they didn't treat them as such. It may be that U-Dub really is that much improved, in which case it'll show later on and LSU's resume will look that much better. For now, LSU drops below teams that took care of business like top-25 teams do.

- I'd move BYU higher if Sam Bradford hadn't been hurt.

Friday, September 4, 2009

game preview: William & Mary

Date/Time: September 5; 6:00 PM

TV: Your computer

Last matchup: UVA 40, W&M 16 (1995)

Team records: UVA 0-0 (0-0), W&M 0-0 (0-0)

Last week: was not football season just yet

Line: none

W&M blogs: none that I know of

Injury report:

OUT: WR Dontrelle Inman, OT Lamar Milstead, CB Mike Parker, LB Billy Schautz, WR Bobby Smith

DOUBTFUL: None

QUESTIONABLE: FB Rashawn Jackson

PROBABLE: WR Quintin Hunter, RB Max Milien, RB Mikell Simpson, TE Joe Torchia

ZOIKS omg omg omg IT'S FOOTBALL SEASON. Someone forgot to let NC State know, and I'm not sure Oregon got the memo either. Given our history in openers the past few years, one can only hope we don't also play a game that competes with Snuggie ads for quality.

HOW WE CAN WIN

- Just play. There shouldn't be a position on the field where we don't have the superior talent. Not that there aren't a lot of ways we can screw this up, but this is one game where if we just take care of the fundamentals and the football, the rest will take care of itself.

- No, really. That's all there is to it, or should be. W&M is breaking in a new quarterback. NC State beat them pretty badly last year - the score looked close but the game was not. Harrison Beck shredded them. He was 17 for 25 and threw a pair of touchdowns. This is the same guy who checked in for the rest of the season with a 31% completion rate and 6 picks to go along with no touchdowns at all. You can throw on these guys, and I really doubt they'll be able to do the same to us.

HOW WE CAN LOSE

- There isn't a single matchup that they can exploit on us. Then again, Wyoming looked like a pretty good warm-up opponent too. All we have to do to lose is come in with whatever wack mindset we opened up the last three seasons with.

HOW THE GAME WILL GO

Despite our recent history of 1) playing like baked ass on opening day and 2) playing like baked ass against I-AA opponents, I feel pretty comfortable out on this limb here calling for a pretty big win. William & Mary is no Richmond. William & Mary does happen to be ranked in I-AA at the moment, but Richmond went on from our game to win a national championship. I'm not saying it's inconceivable we lose, but it just.....shouldn't happen. I shudder to think if it does.

REST OF THE ACC

We're not the only ACC team opening up with a I-AA opponent. Four other teams will, too.

South Carolina 7, NC State 3 - Thursday

Georgia Tech vs. Jacksonville State, 1:00
Boston College vs. Northeastern, 2:00
Wake Forest vs. Baylor, 3:30
North Carolina vs. The Citadel, 6:00
Clemson vs. Middle Tennessee, 6:00
Duke vs. Richmond, 7:00
Virginia Tech vs. Alabama, 8:00
Maryland @ California, 10:00

Miami vs. Florida State, 8:00

Thursday, September 3, 2009

season preview: the defense

Part one, the offense, is here: link clicky. You can click on that or you can just, you know, scroll down, it was only one post ago.

Defense has nearly always been our stronger suit, and that's to be expected because Al Groh is a defensive coach at heart. So it's weird to be more confident in the offense than the defense going into a season, but that's exactly what I got going on here. As with the offense, I'm not going to do a position-by-position breakdown because you can find those at my Examiner writings. As with the offense, it's question-and-answer time.

1. The depth is kinda iffy, isn't it?

Yes, yes it is. Iffy does not begin to describe it. Only in the secondary can we rotate players in and out that have plenty of game experience. And then it's still only a three-man rotation at each position. Brandon Woods and Chase Minnifield can rotate in behind the starters at safety and corner, respectively, without much if any drop in production. The fourth at each position is a major dropoff, especially at safety where Trey Womack has been a special-teams guy his whole career.

In the front seven though.....eyyyoucchh. Defensive end is a freshman party. Our backup nose tackle is 245 pounds. The backup inside linebackers combined for a grand total of two plays last year, because one of them wasn't even eligible.

The starters are all solid. Especially on the line. But injuries anywhere up front would be just deadly. Don't even want to think about it. Here in the preseason we all like to think this or that player is some kind of stud because the coaches might say some nice things, but the reality of this is that the backup front seven is, as a whole, woefully inexperienced, and it'll show all too clearly if injuries strike the starters.

2. No Clint Sintim, no Chris Long. Will there be a pass rush this season?

Sure, with of course the already standard caveat that health is a must. One thing that was nice to see last year was Matt Conrath and Cam Johnson getting plenty of time on the field, because they're it now. They're the guys. It'll be interesting to see if this experiment of putting John-Kevin Dolce out there at nose tackle in pass rush situations works, because if it does, look out. Conrath and Johnson have Holy Terror potential on the outside and if Dolce flushes a hapless pocket quarterback out of his pocket, these guys can clean that up no sweat. All three of those guys are physical and athletic.

3. OK, so three of four starting linebackers are new to the gig. That's bad. But four of four starters in the secondary are awesome. That's good. Which outweighs the other? Should we be worrying about the linebackers more than we brag about the secondary, or vice versa?

That depends entirely on the opponent. Take Georgia Tech. Last year they just shredded us on their first two drives. It was awful. Tech had nine possessions in the game and they got 45% of their yards on those first two drives, both of which resulted in touchdowns. Then our defense adjusted and suddenly our linebackers were there to make all the plays. That's what happens when three of them are seniors. Can a much less experienced unit make the same adjustments? I really worry about the GT game for that reason. North Carolina is another team with a powerful rushing attack that might cause problems.

On the other hand, certain opponents play right into our hands. Maryland has a good but not great running game and a quarterback that's neither great nor good. Bad quarterbacks play right into our hands. We can make Maryland completely one-dimensional. If we can open up a lead on them it'll be that much harder for them to come back.

The linebackers are not bad, but as a whole they're not much more than capable, either. But a really good set of safeties can help cover up some mistakes. And I think I like it better this way than the reverse - if we had stud linebackers but inexperienced and slightly undertalented defensive backs. A good secondary can take away the passing game in a way that linebackers cannot, and help support the linebackers in the run game too. And it's not like the linebackers are bad. Denzel Burrell has a year of starting experience and the coaches (and me, on occasion) rave about Steve Greer. We're going to cringe at times about our linebackers, but on balance, we're in good shape.

4. Predictions?

Yeah, OK.

- The run defense was pretty good last year, giving up 3.7 yards a carry. That was 40th in the country. It will not be as good this year. Our linebackers are neither supremely talented nor experienced. They are, as I said, at best capable. If I had to pick one coach in the country to coach up a set of inexperienced linebackers, I'd want Al Groh. But the coaches can't make the plays or the reads for the players. Inexperience is going to cause those reads to come a hair slower no matter what, and good running teams will generally be able to take advantage.

Plus, things are going to happen like, teams running draw plays once they figure out we have a 245-pound nose tackle in passing situations. I really hope that does not bite us in the ass.

- The pass defense was also pretty good last year. It will not get worse and most likely, it'll get better. The ACC does not have a lot of good wide receivers, and choosing between Cook's or Dowling's side of the field to throw at is a scary proposition. Or you could throw over the middle which is the territory of the player Al Groh has talked up the most this offseason; that'd be Rodney McLeod. (Actually, the ACC has a lot of good secondaries and not a lot of good quarterbacks, so we're not the only team with this happy situation. Passing yards may be hard to come by in this conference.) But after doing all those season previews, I like our secondary matched up against any in the ACC. Assuming we have a pass rush, and we will if the primary pass rushers are healthy, we'll be very stingy when the opponent's quarterback drops back in the pocket.

- Steve Greer will live up to most of the hype. He's not big and will get exploded by the occasional fullback. But by all accounts he's smart as hell, and that's a lot more important than athleticism at inside linebacker.

- Matt Conrath will pick up at least five sacks.

- Will Hill won't be the only true freshman defensive end to find his way on the field. At some point this season, we'll also hear from Brent Urban, who is a big, big man. However, the line is the only place we'll see any members of the recruiting class of '09 on the defense this year.

- Like I said yesterday: 7-5.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

season preview: the offense

Oy. I don't know what makes me think I can go on a booze cruise all afternoon and come home in any shape to write a post. Yesterday I fully intended to come home and worst case scenario maybe stay up a little bit late putting this up, and then sat down and realized just how successful those efforts were likely to be. So that didn't happen.

That means both the offense and the defense are both getting crammed into a real short time frame. One big happy mess. Two separate posts, though, we gotta keep some kind of law and order around here or nothing'll ever get done. Like it does anyway.

Let's jump right in to the offense. For position-by-position stuff, just read my Examiner work. No sense duplicating that. It's all linked right there on the side for easy clicking. Instead, we'll go with question-and-answer. There's no shortage of the former and precious few of the latter.

1. Who's going to play quarterback?

OK, I lied. We will break down this one position. Might as well. Everyone always treats this as some earthshattering new piece of drama. Really, it's not. In this decade alone we've asked this question in, let's see, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009. Birds fly, fish swim, dogs bark, and UVA fans wonder who's going to play quarterback. A lot of this is because Groh likes to play keep-away from the media about stuff like this, and further he's never bought into the notion that you have to have one and only one for stability's sake. Once upon a time I remember Groh musing about the position and opining that it shouldn't be that much different from any other position on the field where you rotate people in and out all the time.

That said, though, it's pretty rare that you rotate three players in and out at quarterback. This is almost never done. Groh seems determined to try, but I'm willing to put down a lot of money that when all's said and done, the snaps won't be split three ways evenly. Someone's eventually going to slide out of the rotation for consistency's sake, and my money's on that being Verica.

Why? Well, let's start off by being honest with ourselves about one thing. Vic Hall's the most athletic and electric of the three, there's no doubt about that. So if he was throwing even equally as well as the other two, there'd be no question at all. It's my opinion Hall is the worst passer of the three, and that's not borne out of observation, that's out of the fact that he hasn't put that separation between himself and the other two, despite having an obvious advantage in the athleticism department. It's logic.

So either Sewell or Verica will be passing the ball a lot this year. I think it'll be Sewell because while Verica has the strongest and often most accurate arm, Verica isn't well suited to run Hall's plays. Sewell is. You take Hall out and put Verica in, and teams already know you're going to pass the ball. Tech had that figured out last year. You take Hall out and put Sewell in, and you don't tip your hand as much. Hall, of course, will attempt more passes per game than the measly one that he threw against Tech. Also, Verica won't be completely shut out of the offense, but I think barring an injury, he'll only make appearances toward the beginning and end of the season, and not as much in the middle. Still, I think the baseline assumption should be that Hall is the nominal "starter", and Sewell will trot in for a few series each game and whenever the coaches want to do something fancy like put them both in the backfield. And don't be surprised to see Hall making cameos at weird places like slot receiver.

2. So what kind of a spread offense are we getting, anyway? Running spread? Passing spread?

Calling someone a spread coordinator is like calling someone European: there is a certain meaning to that, but nobody would suggest a Swede is terribly similar to an Italian. We got a spread guru for a coordinator now, so it's fair to wonder what that means. Are we going to turn into Texas Tech?

Gregg Brandon isn't really married to the idea of running more or passing more. He's proven adept at adjusting his playbook and playcalling to his personnel. In 2006, Bowling Green had a running quarterback and ran the ball a lot more than they passed. The next year, that guy got moved to running back and a big galoot of a pocket passer took over the show, and they passed more.

Brandon does like to pass, his philosophy being that you can't be a great offense unless you can throw the football. In the same link there, you can see why I like Sewell's chances of getting on the field more than Verica's: Brandon likes short and quick throws, which is exactly what Sewell was asked to do in 2007. An old article points out that Bowling Green at one time lined up with five wide receivers once every three plays. I don't think we'll see that quite as much, but we will see it, which is why running backs and quarterbacks have suddenly found themselves turned into receivers. Five receivers is a brand-new concept to an Al Groh-coached team. Another brand-new concept: the option. This just hasn't been in the playbook, but Brandon will be bringing it back, and it's why I like the odds of seeing Vic Hall out in the slot. One of Brandon's staples has been to add to the usual option concept the possibility of a shovel to the slot receiver inside. Sewell lines up in the shotgun with Mikell Simpson behind him to his right and Vic Hall in the slot to his left; all three run to the right and Sewell has three options: shovel, keep, or pitch.

The answer, if you care to pigeonhole it, is that we'll probably lean more towards passing than running. And when we do run, don't expect a steady dose of the traditional handoffs and power sweeps. For one thing, the quarterback will operate out of the shotgun, so plays that count as run plays will be a lot of quarterback keepers, options, draw plays, and the like. The days of a quarterback taking the snap from under center and handing the ball off to a running back who follows a fullback and a pulling guard are in the past. But at the same time, passes will operate much like running plays: option shovels, screens, quick slants to a slot who's got a linebacker trying to cover him.

3. Do we have the personnel to run this thing?

Absolutely. About the only issue as far as that's concerned is the offensive line. I frankly do worry about this: Al Groh has always wanted his offensive linemen to be absolutely huge. The bigger the better. And so they are: we have three 300-pounders on the line. Can they move around in space? Are they well-conditioned enough? Legitimate questions, but remember: we've always required our guards to pull around and block the other side. A lot. That requires some hustle and athleticism, and they're pretty good at it. Both B.J. Cabbell and Austin Pasztor are over 300 pounds, but I don't worry about their ability to get around and move. A bigger adjustment will be pass-blocking out of larger splits. The larger line splits spread out the defense and allow more room to run in, but they also make it more imperative that each lineman win his individual battle when pass-blocking.

As for the rest of the offense, it's not even a question. The running backs are just the guys we want. So are the quarterbacks. So are the receivers. We can put to rest any fears that we'll have to undergo a Michigan-like transformation in which we have to endure a season of mismatched pieces running a foreign system while we wait for the "right" players to be recruited. We have them now.

4. Biggest strengths? Biggest concerns?

The biggest strength is that we simply have a guy in charge who knows offense. Can you really spell out our offensive philosophy under Mike Groh without resorting to sarcasm? There was just no theme. It wasn't an offense, it was just a collection of plays. It was exactly the sort of offense you'd expect from a guy who'd become an offensive coordinator without much of an apprenticeship.

Now we have an actual system. The plays are designed to complement one another. There's a theme, a rhyme and reason behind things. That alone is worth a lot.

The offensive line improved mightily last year from beginning to end and that is a fantastic sign for this year. Never ever ever ever ever underestimate the value of a veteran line that's played together. This is the biggest and best thing we have going for us on the field. There's a lot to be excited about: there's incredible speed at wide receiver, there's a scary-good playmaker at quarterback, and there's plenty of new blood (Torrey Mack, Tim Smith) with sky's-the-limit talent. That's all well and good but none of it goes anywhere without an offensive line, and I really, really like what I see there.

It's easy to look at last year's stat sheet, realize most of the guys at the top are gone, and write off UVA. It's a favorite tactic of sportswriters to pick teams based on how many returning skill players they have, and of course it worked spectacularly last year when everyone was lining up to anoint Clemson as King of Everything. Sure - all the major passcatchers are gone. The top five, actually, which accounted for 80% of our receptions. Inexperience at receiver and lack of depth at running back are what I'd label the two major concerns, and both can be overcome. Get excited about the offense this year.

5. OK, I am excited. So what are the predictions?

- You'll see a huge uptick in yards-per-attempt in the passing game. 5.6 is just horrendous. If we could have added just one yard to that last year, we'd still be very mediocre in that category (ranked in the 70s instead of the 100s) and it would have been good for an extra 37 yards a game. The difference between the horrible offense we had and a mediocre offense is the difference between 5-7 and 7-5.

- Nobody will emerge as a McMullen-like go-to guy at receiver, but it won't matter because enough of those guys will be good to keep the ball spread around and the offense effective. There's too much youth in the receiver corps for any one of them to play consistently well enough to rack up huge numbers, but there's enough depth that, much more often than not, someone will emerge to have a big day.

- I hope Mikell Simpson stays healthy, but if he doesn't, Torrey Mack will make a huge push for ACC Freshman of the Year, and the number of "Mack Truck" references by oh-so-clever color announcers and message board inhabitants will reach triple digits and threaten quadruples.

- I hope Landon Bradley stays healthy, and I believe he'll play very well, but if he gets hurt, Oday Aboushi will Wally Pipp him out of a job.

- Vic Hall will end up taking the majority of snaps at quarterback, followed by Jameel Sewell, followed by Marc Verica. Verica will make some appearances early in the season but be slowly phased out of the picture by October, only to return in late November. This is all assuming good health.

- The offensive improvement will be enough to put us back in the postseason. I still think 7-5 and a bowl game is a more-than-realistic expectation.