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Northwestern vs. Iowa Recap: Another Fourth Quarter Meltdown

Northwestern did a lot of things well in this game. The offense put up a season high in total yards. Jeremy Ebert looked like an All-Big Ten receiver. Adonis Smith ran the ball well and appears to have established himself as the feature back. The future looks bright at quarterback, as Kain Colter was a true triple threat, doing damage passing, rushing and receiving, and Trevor Siemian looked great during a cameo appearance in garbage time.

Unfortunately, Northwestern still lost the game, because the defense is horrendous and because Dan Persa was slightly less than his typical brilliant self.

Star-divide

The box score for this game illustrates why yards per play is a far better metric than total yards. Northwestern out-gained Iowa 495 to 379, making it appear as though the NU offense was the more effective unit. Unfortunately, that stat doesn't include that Northwestern ran an astounding 92 plays on offense, compared to only 50 for Iowa. The Hawkeyes gained 7.58 yards per play, while the Wildcats averaged just 5.38 yards per play, statistics that paint a more accurate picture of how the game unfolded.

At the end of last season, many observers blamed the complete implosion of the Northwestern defense on Dan Persa's injury, hypothesizing that the offense's inability to sustain long drives without Persa wore the defense out. Statistics indicated that the theory had validity, and it gained momentum when Army dominated the time of possession with Persa out in their upset victory a few weeks ago. But after yet another fourth quarter implosion by the defense with Persa back in the lineup, the new reason for the defense's struggles has become clear: they just aren't very good.

After three quarters, the stars were aligned for a Northwestern upset. The offense had completely dominated the time of possession, holding the ball for more than two-thirds of the game. The defense was as well rested as you could possibly hope for. Yet the Iowa offense owned the fourth quarter, going touchdown, touchdown, field goal, touchdown before taking a knee to end the game on the their final possession. Marcus Coker rushed for 124 yards on 22 carries and had gaping holes to run through, and once again the NU secondary got abused for long touchdowns on play action. The pass rush didn't do the secondary any favors either, failing to record a sack on James Vandenberg.

Of all the defensive issues though, the secondary remains the most glaring. Northwestern has faced five teams this season that try to pass the ball, and all five have moved the ball through the air with ease. And while part of the problem has been Northwestern getting out-talented by guys like Momah from Boston College and Hemingway from Michigan, every week has featured disastrous breakdowns in coverage. And thanks to this alarming post game quote from Pat Fitzgerald, it's clear why the breakdowns keep happening. Via Teddy Greenstein:

Fitz and D Dugar acknowledged what's clear -- at times NU DBs don't know if they are in man or zone coverage.

Fitz: "You’ve got guys coming off the field saying: ‘I’m playing this concept, (he’s) playing that concept.' When those breakdowns in communication have happened this year, they have been disastrous. It starts with us as coaches. Why are they confused?"

ARE YOU KIDDING ME? We are halfway through the regular season and the defensive backs don't know what defense they are supposed to be playing? That is perhaps the most stunning admission of coaching incompetence I have ever heard. In the first game of the season with new starters in the secondary, such confusion would be disappointing, but somewhat understandable. But in Week 7, it's unconscionable. Northwestern could have Darrelle Revis at corner and Ed Reed at safety, but if Revis thinks they're playing zone and has deep help but Reed thinks they're playing man to man and goes to cover the tight end, the offense will still have an easy touchdown completion. Embarrassing. I'm not one to call for people to lose their jobs, but if this problem isn't corrected immediately, then some people on the coaching staff need to lose their jobs.

Yet despite the defense's horrifically bad play, Northwestern still could have won this game. The offense moved the ball well, but squandered several long drives, most notably when Dan Persa threw an awful interception on first and goal that was returned for a 98 yard touchdown. NU was also hurt by a couple of odd decisions on 4th down. In the second quarter, Fitzgerald chose to punt on 4th and long from the Iowa 34 rather than attempt a 51 yard field goal with Jeff Budzien. It's unclear if Budzien is capable of making 51 yard field goals, so the decision to punt when considered on its own might not have been that bad. However, in the fourth quarter on 4th and1 from the Iowa 30, Fitzgerald decided to bring out Budzien for a 47 yarder rather than go for the first down. If Budzien is so unlikely to make a 51 yarder that punting to gain 14 yards of field position is a better option, then he sure as hell isn't very likely to make a 47 yarder. The two decisions are completely incongruous. And regardless of how good Budzien is at kicking (after all, he split the uprights from 47 yards), Northwestern's offense was a dominant 16 of 22 on third down in the game, so their chances of picking up the 4th and 1 are certainly better than Budzien making the field goal.

So now Northwestern sits at 2-4 and their bowl hopes are circling the drain. If they can't pull off an upset over Penn State next week, then we can forget about a bowl game and move on to basketball season. Joy.

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Yeah.

That…uh…sounds about right.

What a depressing night. Watching the Iowa offense move towards us in the end zone, I was just wondering, “OK, when is Vandenberg going to find McNutt on a deep route?” Then it happened. And again.

by MNWildcat on Oct 16, 2011 1:22 PM CDT reply actions  

Agreed

If the defensive coaches can’t get the playcalls in right, they might as well just play one coverage every down. At least that would force the offense to beat the coverage instead of releasing receivers deep down the middle without a DB in sight.

by MountainTiger on Oct 16, 2011 1:26 PM CDT reply actions  

Let's have NU's players hold up 4 fingers.

B/c then, our team will realize the importance of the 4th quarter. Nothing says intensity more than the 3rd string Left Tackle holding up 4 fingers to let everyone, that this is the 4th quarter.

Ugggg. What a joke. This team might not make a bowl, I mean holy cow.

Also, in regards to the DB’s not knowing whether it is man or zone coverage, let’s not make the DB coach the sacrificial lamb for a horrible defense. I don’t care if they keep him or Hankwitz, b/c it has been bad for the Fitz tenure.

Also, the DJ’s assertion about Persa’s loss made the defense worse is partially true, but they were so bad against Illinois that Peyton Manning couldn’t save them. They cannot tackle, so if they are tired or not, it doesn’t matter, they are bad at football.

Be honest, Fitz fans, where does he rank in terms of being an in-game coach in the Big Ten? B/c judging by the game and post game threads, many of you think he is bad. So with bad recruiting and bad coaching, how does anyone expect this team to be good? I don’t and neither should you.

Btw, Loretta8, I really am liking your twitter account more and more, and your negativity/opinions are very much in line w/mine. Also, EXCELLENT recap.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 1:51 PM CDT reply actions  

"let's not make the DB coach the sacrificial lamb"

So, your answer to seeing one unit on the defense be particularly bad is to argue that they aren’t a problem? And somehow the defensive staff, which is responsible for teaching the players the defensive calls, isn’t responsible for the defense not knowing those calls? And not to beat a dead horse, but the 2008 defense (mediocre, maybe even above average) was the best defense NU has had since 1996. The D showed marked improvement in the first couple years under Fitz before the avant-garde performance art display of last year and the innovative cover none experiment this year.

by MountainTiger on Oct 16, 2011 2:44 PM CDT up reply actions   1 recs

Classic.
the avant-garde performance art display of last year and the innovative cover none experiment this year.

I love it.

by MNWildcat on Oct 16, 2011 2:54 PM CDT up reply actions  

Let me be clear.

Our DB’s are terrible. Our defense (all of it) is terrible. By replacing the DB coach, I don’t want fans to say, ohh well now, our defense will be significantly upgraded. Sure, do I advocate getting rid of the DB’s coach, sure, but I could make an argument for the defensive coordinator and the head coach that has recruited these players. So, all of it is bad.

In terms of the 08 defense, yes, it is the best defense since 96, but that was still bad. Don’t compare against NU teams, compare against other Big Ten teams. NU’s defense has been bad for a long, long time.

Let’s fix that. Not pin it on one relatively meaningless position coach.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 2:55 PM CDT up reply actions  

for the record

the coach in question is Jerry Brown. He’s been DB’s coach at NU since the Barnett era, so anything said about his coaching also applies to all the teams since the Rose Bowl.

by Rodger Sherman on Oct 16, 2011 3:03 PM CDT up reply actions  

Thank you.

It is an overall combination of bad. Recruiting + Coaching = Bad.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 3:07 PM CDT up reply actions  

"relatively meaningless position coach"

This is our disagreement. I have no strong thoughts on whether replacing Brown or any other coach is a good idea, but assistants and position coaches are important. Also, I compare NU defenses to historical performance for two reasons: first, because it makes no sense to evaluate them without the program history. If the Walker teams had fielded dominating defenses that collapsed under Fitzgerald, pointing to the top of the program would make sense. Second, because Northwestern doesn’t need a great defense, just a mediocre one. Since 2000, Northwestern’s offensive staff has consistently developed players and fielded solid units. I see no reason to think that this will change, so a defense that can consistently keep opponents under 30 is all the program needs to compete. So while I would love it if NU suddenly became dominant on both sides of the ball, it seems less likely than returning to mediocrity on defense without falling apart on offense.

by MountainTiger on Oct 16, 2011 3:26 PM CDT up reply actions  

Comparing to the past goes nowhere.

What is the point? We are better or worse than Barnett/Walker’s defense, too bad we’re competing in the Big Ten NOW.

So, you want NU to have a mediocre defense b/c we don’t need a good b/c our offense carries us. Ok, that’s fair. But, let’s aim higher than mediocre since we seem to be failing under our aspirations.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 3:40 PM CDT up reply actions  

Baby steps

If actually communicating the same defensive call to the entire defense can take away the massively blown coverages in evidence against EIU, Illinois, and Iowa, I would be happy with this as a starting point. The Michigan jump ball offense was more an issue of guys getting beat by better athletes, so fixing these blown coverages obviously won’t fix everything. And its not that I don’t want a return of defenses like the ‘95 team, its that the bare minimum for this team competing for conference titles is a competent defense and continuation of the last decade’s offensive trends. If that is all I get, I’m not going to get bent out of shape; 2008 was fun and a team of that quality that gets a few breaks can win a conference title. Since my aspirations have exactly zero real influence on the team’s performance, I’m not going to worry about whether aiming high will result in a better team when they fall short.

by MountainTiger on Oct 16, 2011 4:34 PM CDT up reply actions  

2008 defense / coaches now

2008 defense was not bad. Against other big ten teams, it ranked 4th in scoring and 5th in yards. Not awesome, not bad. It passed the feel test too. I wasn’t thinking on every play when is the other shoe going to drop. Since then, they’ve been bad again. And either the rest of the big ten has figured out the schemes and Hankwitz and crew has not adjusted well at all or the abilities of the players has diminished greatly. My guy feel says it’s more on the coaches, and comments about miscommunication seem to indicate that. Cleaning house at the appropriate levels should be considered. I don’t know what that is, but from an outsiders standpoint, I have not seen a good secondary from Northwestern since 2008 and before that 1996.

Lets not forget that in game coaching seems bad across the board. McCall calls the wrong plays on key plays (Colter on 3rd down this week, running on 4th down and 8 against Illinois). He also called trick plays this week when they weren’t working. I feel like he coaches QBs very well. He designs plays for the play book wonderfully. Then he dials up inopportune plays at big times. That’s why this team has a very bad yards to points ratio. That’s been a consistent problem.

by surfmen93 on Oct 16, 2011 4:19 PM CDT up reply actions  

Teams that blow 4th quarter leads/ties...

are leaderless, soft and poorly coached. WE have a few more of these left before the end of this season.

Dikaia Upotheke - Justice Our Foundation

by Lord Willie on Oct 16, 2011 2:13 PM CDT reply actions  

Also, can we stop w/the overemphasis of the 4th quarter blown leads?

College fb is made for comebacks. They stop the clock on 4th down, they incentivize the offense to score more, so enough of this. I really don’t care if they have a lead and lose it or get a big blow out. Who cares? This team is losing games, focus on that.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 2:30 PM CDT up reply actions  

I know you don't want to hear from an Iowa fan right now

but as a fan of a team who lost a lot of 4th quarter leads last year, it’s not as simple as just blaming the coaches. It’s an easy answer, but it’s not always the right one. But yes, it’s frustrating as hell.

"'Contrariwise,' continued Tweedledee, 'If it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic." - Lewis Caroll, Alice Through the Looking Glass

by chitownhawkeye on Oct 16, 2011 8:59 PM CDT up reply actions   1 recs

It's true

Also, I certainly wouldn’t presume to speak for SOP, but I don’t mind the Iowa fans that have posted here.

by RotoJeff on Oct 16, 2011 10:53 PM CDT up reply actions  

umm, yeah

Lord Willie, stop being a racist asshole and making Northwestern fans on SB Nation look bad.

by Loretta8 on Oct 17, 2011 8:57 AM CDT up reply actions  

College football is made to keep bad teams competitive...

Ok, let’s not harp on 4th quarter bed shitting. Let’s focus on why we are losing games… Hmmmmmmmm, 4th quarter bed shitting?

Dikaia Upotheke - Justice Our Foundation

by Lord Willie on Oct 16, 2011 3:25 PM CDT reply actions  

Ok, I see what you are saying.

Sorry, I didn’t realize that you were saying the reason NU is losing is b/c of poor 4th quarter performances. Yes, it is poor 4th quarter performances, but it also a combination poor 1-3 quarters.

But, I do see what you are saying.

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 16, 2011 3:35 PM CDT up reply actions  

This is taking me back to 2001

I’m sort of repeating what I wrote on LTP, but oh well, just grin and bear it! :)

Rodger was probably 11 years old back in the day, but I have not been this upset with the Cats since the 2001 season when we started out 4-1 and ended up 4-7. Six straight losses where our opponents scored between 32 and 59 points, and blown 4th quarter leads to Penn State and Bowling Green State at home. This was following a Big 10 championship where we were predicted to repeat and we had Zak Kustok and Damien Anderson back for their senior years.

When Marvin McNutt caught that TD pass, wide open, it was deja-vu to a similiar TD pass the Illini pulled off against us two weeks prior, and to what EIU pulled off during our first home game this season. This is one of the worst defenses I’ve ever seen out of a Northwestern team, and yet they are more talented than this. If anyone wants to rehash the finer points and failures of last night’s game, go read LTP – - no need to rehash it again. The performance of this defense falls squarely on coaching! We can criticize these guys for failing to execute, but when they come off the field confused that falls squarely on the coaching staff for failing to clarify the message. And considering we have a D-minded head coach, that is just downright unacceptable.

Just like an effective President of the United States has to surround themselves with a strong cabinet, which fills in any gaps the leader may have, so does a good football coach. Fitz has had 6 seasons to build an effective coaching team and has failed. If he were at any other school or wasn’t tied into this new 10 year contract, he’d be on the hot seat right now. Personally, I like Fitz, but I’m calling it like I see it. I also recommend Fitz read “Team of Rivals,” which explains how Abraham Lincoln put together this same type of cabinet.

Persa is still not 100%. He’s certainly good enough to be back on the field and effective, but we can’t expect Dan to be the one-man show he was in 2010, and he shouldn’t be expected to be the one-man show either. His pick-six was just a bad decision and a bad throw, but once we tied the score at 17-17, it was like being back to scoreless and this team had a new breath of life in the game – - – and they just blew it.

I think we are looking at a 4 – 8 team this year. I hope I’m wrong, but something needs to drastically change for us to even have a shot at winning against Penn State, Nebraska and Michigan State. I think beating Indiana is 50-50 at best. It pains me to say something like this, but that’s where my head is at.

My hope is that Brown and Hankwitz are gone for 2012.

by mwmakerx5 on Oct 16, 2011 5:02 PM CDT reply actions   1 recs

Love it.

A little deep and analytical, but just lvoe it. You nailed it on coaching staff, and Fitz is supposed to be this great defensive guy. Umm, not really.

Love it MWMakerX5

by NU Alumni - Class of 2002 on Oct 17, 2011 9:35 AM CDT up reply actions  

Team of Rivals

I love this idea! If Fitz is conservative, he needs a pair of aggressive coordinators to get different voices and find the happy medium.

by surfmen93 on Oct 16, 2011 5:33 PM CDT reply actions  

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