|
Football
Post-Game Quotes: Notre Dame
Sept. 17, 2011
Recap |
Final Stats |
Notes |
Photo Gallery
NOTRE DAME, Ind. -
To begin with, I thought to come down to Notre Dame and play well we had to do a number of things: We had to travel as a team. I thought we did well in that area. And we had to come down here with the belief. That belief remains intact and that will carry us through this football season. We also had to make plays that we had to defend. Those are things we had to do if we were going to be able to win. We had to sort of silence the crowd a little bit, we felt. But defend, that means protecting the quarterback. That means playing on kickoff. Playing well on kickoff doesn't mean just playing on the defensive side of the ball, it means we've got to play well on special teams. The one big kickoff return in the first half obviously was a huge play for us. I thought the guy got ambushed, sort of pinballed into another guy. And they were off to the races. But obviously that was a huge play in the football game. We felt we needed to have one special teams play that would be explosive to help us win the football game and they got that play rather than us. When you look at us collectively, we've got to establish a running game and be more balanced, I think, as an offense. Defensively, we played very well the second half. Came up with some turnovers, two turnovers, actually. The third one was on a special teams play. But came up with some turnovers in the first half. But offensively we've got to do something with those turnovers as opposed to getting three points. That hurt us there and we had field position a number of other times I felt around the 50 where we need to convert on those things and have more opportunities to score points. The field goal at the end of the half, my call, didn't work. Three points. But I don't think that's why we lost the game. But I'll take the blame for that. But our guys will continue to push. And that's the beautiful thing about being in a conference, I guess, is that our conference still remains intact. All of our goals remain intact. We'll get ready to play Central Michigan next week and we'll look forward to that. Congratulate Notre Dame on their win. I thought they played very well, especially on the defensive side of the ball. And I thought they ran the football in the first half, which I think was the key to some of their success in the first half. So I'll take some questions. Q. Coach, first of all, could you tell what happened on that field goal attempt? Q. You were very effective on the 8 to 10 yard passes down the field. What was the problem throwing the longer passes? But two things I think enter into that. One is we have to have protection to be able to throw the ball down the field. And then the second thing is the way the game played out in the fourth quarter, they weren't going to allow us to throw the ball deep down into the field. But I thought they played the ball well in the deep part of the field. Cunningham comes up with I think 12 catches, one big one down the field. Other than that, he had a couple knocked off him that would have been great catches. They were great plays by the defenders. Give credit to Notre Dame in those areas and congratulate them on some of these things as well. Q. How big a concern is your offensive line right now? Burkland going down, can you give us an update on that? Is that a potentially season ending thing? But I thought Fonoti came in and played pretty well. We can't have the penalties that sort of occurred in the fourth quarter. We can't have those things happening for us. And we've got to get a push and run the football. But whether it's the offensive line or whether it's the tight ends or whether it's the fullback, all these things enter into running the football. The same with pass protection. It's a running back potentially that has the problem with pass protection or it's a tight end, or it's a route problem or it's a coverage or whatever. Or it could be the quarterback. So it all plays together. And there's no one group of people that's saying, okay, they can't run the ball so it's the offensive line. That's not really how it works in the real world. Q. Mark, it's a little bit of a follow up on Joe's question, but would it be primarily youth on the offensive line that you blame for not being able to run the ball? That's been such a problem here against good teams. And when they start playing more, they're going to get better and there's a big curve. If you're playing with the senior there and you have a problem, I think that's more of a concern than if you're playing with a sophomore or freshman or junior college player because you know those guys are going to get better. They're talented athletes. And so I'm not concerned about it. What I am concerned about is that we stay together as a football team; that we weather a storm. I think that's what you have to do when tough things come down the pipe at you. That's where we're at. We'll weather the storm. Our guys are disappointed, obviously, very disappointed. But sometimes these things happen. We have to pull together. We have to move to the next challenge. Q. You talked about penalties, but up front a couple of them came from an experienced guy like Foreman, does anything surprise you about the discipline from your team today? So they're going to get tired, but we have to shore up the areas where there was a problem. And obviously you're concerned about penalties or lack thereof on the other side. But you deal with it. Q. Last year you saw Dayne Crist run this offense for the Irish. What did Tommy Rees bring this year that you noticed from last year? Sometimes guys make a mistake and you gotta they're certainly more qualified to answer who should be playing quarterback than I am. But I think both those guys are good football players and both those guys have the ability to function well and lead from what I've seen and win football games. Q. What happened on the kickoff return? They got Isaiah. Sort of sealed him off a little bit. When they knocked down the two guys with one guy they were sort of off and running. They made a nice cut and got the edge. Q. Earlier in the week you talked about attention to detail and how important the little things are going to be in this game. And it seemed to play out. Is that something that you'll look to clean up? And, again, credit Notre Dame in terms of what they were able to do. I thought they played hard. And they made plays. They made plays on the ball down the field as a secondary, I thought. They got a push out of their defensive front. Cousins was on his back a lot after throwing the ball. So they were applying some pressure and that takes an effect on a guy. If you hit the quarterback 20 times in the game, I'm not sure how many times he got hit, but that can take an effect on somebody. So those things happen. If you look at why it is what it is, I guess, you look at we have three turnovers. We're down inside the 10 twice and we come away with nothing on those. One of them is mine. Another one is an interception. And, you know, so those things are happening. We have to obviously omit those, clear those up. Q. (Off microphone)? So an adjustment to it, you know that first series we have a chance to get off the field a couple times. I can't really remember. But it's how the offense is coming, and how rapidly it's coming at you. You have to get used to that. We played much better in the second half. But, again, we have an opportunity to shut them out really I feel in the second half. And they make a couple of plays and then they throw the fade. So make a couple of plays, there's a couple of calls, whatever. There's always going to be plays that you wish would have gone our way or something like that. But, again, you just have to deal with what really happened, look at what really happened, beyond looking at this because you don't really know. I'm on the sideline. You guys are in the box. But find out what really happened and then clear those things up. And I think if we do those things, we're going to have a good football team. We've got guys who can make plays. Q. On the third and one, when Cousins went long, can you explain your decision process for that? Sometimes it's there. Could have converted it. It would have been a great call. I challenge our coaches to be playmakers as well and try to make plays and that's what we're trying to do as a coach. Q. The fact that they were 0 2 coming in, did you sense that Notre Dame played with any special desperation? So it's the way the game's played. And credit them and what they were able to do. Credit their defense, when they had sudden changes going in and making a play and stopping, whatever, so those things are going to happen. But I don't feel like they were they played two good football games where they had every opportunity to win that football game. Turnovers hurt them in those games. Q. On the fake field goal, can you give us the design of that play how it was supposed to work?
Notre Dame Coach Brian Kelly And that was the theme this week. By any means, just find a way to win the football game. You're a good enough football team to beat any team you play. We needed big plays at times of the game. Obviously last week, you know, a lot of the talk was the secondary. I think they played outstanding down the stretch. Came up with a big interception. And it's nice when you're coaching a team and they're able to bounce back from adversity as a team, as a unit. Then as an individual Gary Gray played one of his best games at Notre Dame since I've been here. So as a coach to see guys bounce back from adversity as a unit, as a team, and pick each other up. Because we needed everybody. We played six true freshmen out there. George Atkinson, a true freshman, had a big kickoff return for us. And Aaron Lynch was outstanding. Troy Nicholas started in place of Prince Shembo at the drop position. Stephon Tuitt. I can go on and on. So it was everybody. It was seniors. It was juniors. It was sophomores. Everybody pitched in and we found a way to win. That will open up to questions. Q. When did you decide to put Atkinson in on the kickoff returns? And is he there to stay? Q. The frustration you had last year against this team and against this school even before you came here, was that addressed at all this week? Was that a factor in any of this and the way you played? We have a great deal of respect for Michigan State and Coach Dantonio. But it was really about us and what we needed to do to be better. And we couldn't relive what had happened in the past, because we needed to do something right now. Q. Can you take us through your viewpoint of the fake field goal attempt before halftime, what you saw? And we just did our job on that. And obviously able to come up with a big play. Q. Is there any more that you can tell us about Prince Shembo's situation? Q. How did you feel like Filer and Nicholas stood in in that spot? And we needed Steve. And Steve came through for us as well. Hadn't played a lot of drop for us. Had focused primarily on four down pass rush. So guys just pitching in. Everybody finding a way to help us win. Q. Your push up front, you talked about Lynch, could you talk more about him and just the general push you got from the front? If he didn't get to the quarterback, he got held. Stephon Tuitt did a great job for us. We moved a lot of guys in there, kept them fresh and kept the pressure on them. Q. How would you characterize Tommy Rees's play today, especially after two early turnovers? He needs to make a decision there. The interception was one of those things through game plan and game film study he knew he made a mistake. They had an alert player that drops down off their fire zone. He knew right when he did it. So this is still about repetition. This is still about learning. Experience but what I liked about him he managed the game for us. He went in there knowing that we had to find a way to control the line of scrimmage to the point where we could run the football and set up some passes later that gave us big play touchdowns. Q. What inspired you to go to a full contact practice on Wednesday? Did you think it had any impact? Have you done that before? I know you haven't here at Notre Dame done that before in your career? I wanted our guys to be focussed on getting better. And we needed to get better in some certain situations and so being able to tackle in a very short period of time. I don't want to make it sound like we tackled for 45 minutes. We did not. But we had a live, spirited practice and I think it was good for our guys at that time and place of the season. Q. Have you done that before? Q. Blanton had a pretty good day even beyond the interception, could you talk about what he brought out there today? But some guys are just good at it. And he's really good. And he's a spirited guy. He's really, you talk about guys that lead by example, he also leads, he's probably one of our more emotional leaders back there. So when you need a big play, he seems to be around the ball quite a bit. Q. I saw before you guys left the field to go off after the game you kind of grabbed him and talked to him. What did you tell him then? Q. We all know about Michael, but T.J. had three catches, Tyler two catches. Are you sensing Tommy is developing chemistry with either of those guys? So Tommy's developing that rapport with all of them. We know about Michael. Michael, it was hard to get the ball to him today. And we worked hard at it. But when we got some one on one matchups Tommy was able to find the guys that needed to get the ball. Q. You helped them, the team that really likes to run the ball and run it well, 29 yards, forcing them to throw it 54 times, what was the key to that? Was that your game plan force them out of what they like to do and what would you attribute the success to? The question was when we force you to throw, how are we going to play on the back end, and I thought we played very well. Mixed the coverages up well. Played some new nickel coverages and got really good pressure. I think when you press a team that's so conscious of running a football to throwing it 54 times, those are numbers that generally resonate into good things happening, playing against a Michigan State team. Q. Does that speak to your confidence in your secondary, that you felt like forcing them to throw was the way to beat them? Q. You guys turn it over again a few times today. Obviously they didn't hurt you quite as bad as they did the first two games. Do you feel like you're at the point where you take the bad with the good as long as there's enough good to win some games at this point? Q. Going off that, there were imperfections in the game, do you feel like your guys dealt with the imperfections maybe better than they did the first week at all? And so I think in answer to your question, our guys hadn't lacked confidence. They just need to finish. I said at halftime, I think I said finish, finish, finish more times than I've said anything else to a team. And that's all we said. Finish the game, find a way to win. Q. Tyler Eifert appears to be really valuable on third down. It seems like most of his catches come in that situation. Is that happenstance, or is there a reason behind that? I think he showed that today. Tyler can get matched up inside/out, when he gets matched up inside/out. When he's matched inside/out, he's usually matched up on a linebacker. And he's the guy that's going to win a lot of those matchups. So very valuable player for us in that respect. Now, we try to force one to him. Tommy's interception was trying to force it to Tyler in the third down situation. We had a conversation about it and he found him when he needed to. Q. Brian, can you talk about the schematics? Coach Dantonio said it was an ambush run two for one and that sprung George. And what was the setup for that? That's what prompted us to go with George, because we felt if we could get him a sliver he was going to be able to make a big play. And certainly that's what occurred. So the schematics of it were such that the other two times we couldn't catch that theme and he went down pretty easily. We've got some work to do. Q. Big picture with this team, sounds like this week the focus, attention to detail was where you want it to be. On these guys were they kind of desperate for a pay off? How much longer do you think these guys could have gone before, without being rewarded for that focus, that attention to detail may have taken a hit? You know what, I think it's like anything else. I know one thing is that they weren't lacking confidence, but sooner or later you gotta get paid. You gotta be validated in what you do. And so it was a big win for us. Q. Your sudden change defense, I think after three turnovers I think you only gave up three points after the turnovers. Do you try to impress upon the defense you've got to step forward and pick up the offense when they're struggling to turn the football over? So I think you have to address those things. We do. And, again, I think our defensive mentality is such that they feel like they can play with anybody. They wanted to get validated in the back end of the defense. And again I'm not saying we've arrived. But they're prepared for those sudden change opportunities. FastScripts by ASAP Sports
|
SHOP NOWat the official
|