All good points, I digress. I was reaching for a way to make a square peg fit...Absolutely agree. Louisville athletic program and fans always had a chip on their shoulder until they made it to the ACC. Lost the edge that led to a hell of a run.
All good points, I digress. I was reaching for a way to make a square peg fit...Absolutely agree. Louisville athletic program and fans always had a chip on their shoulder until they made it to the ACC. Lost the edge that led to a hell of a run.
OUCH! It hurts to hear but you are absolutely correct. The FB program has always had to scratch and claw for everything that came their way. Once we got into the ACC we suddenly became satisfied with standing on 3rd base., as if being in a P-5 conference was the goal all along. Sounds a lot like another rival we used to belittle for such behavior.Absolutely agree. Louisville athletic program and fans always had a chip on their shoulder until they made it to the ACC. Lost the edge that led to a hell of a run.
No accountability for players? Doesn’t sound like you, King.There is absolutely nothing wrong with our talent or depth. If they aren't executing, that is on the coaches. If they aren't prepared, that is on the coaches. If the play-calling is so incredibly predictable and conservative to the point of detriment, that is on the coaches.
Look, we are in year 4. We've seen enough to get a good indication of how far a coach is going to take us. An influx of blue-chip talent is not going to make this boring-ass, howdy doody system any more effective. Maybe we'll only get beat by Syracuse by 10 instead of 24. Maybe UK will only rush for 150 against us instead of 200+
There is no killer in this coaching staff. That's the bottom line. They are soft.
“Have” not “of”I am or was a pro Satterfield guy as well. The problem is he hitched his wagon to Brown and
The reality Brown’s expertise is the defensive back field. They have developed 1 player in 4 years. Minkins is the only starter that came out of High School. Players transferred even though they would of started. Yeast who was not very good under Brown turned out to be a NFL player.
His whole system is dependent on having guys that can cover. They are terrible on the back end and have been since his arrival. Anyone can watch a see how poorly they are coached.
I really wonder if Malik would of left in Satterfields 1st year if he wouldn’t of been better off. Malik has yet to lead a team to a game winning drive. He had 2 opportunities against FSU. I had zero confidence he wasn’t going to led them to a game winning touchdown. He made some really great throws in the game but when it mattered he threw. Satterfield drew up good plays but Malik let him down.
Coaches are only as good as their players. You aren’t winning close games with a bad defense and QB that doesn’t perform when it matters.
Because players don’t call the plays. I’ve seen nothing that says “it was a good call, just poorly executed”No accountability for players? Doesn’t sound like you, King.
Henry; while “there is some talent” on this team, it is deficient in too many key positions, something our opponents have seized on to the obvious weaknesses. Most of us questioned the talent in our secondary coming into this season, and all anyone needs to do, is examine the way both FSU QBs exploited our corners and safeties. Despite having 3 talented RBs, FSU had confidence their “rookie QB“ could dominate our coverage. That FSU passing efficiency exposed our lack of secondary talent, and there is no way any DC could hide it.
Malik is an exceptional athlete, so no one can argue his talent, but his inability to throw accurately with any consistency explains why he must rely on his feet rather than his arm for any sustainable success.
Your point about “players don’t call the plays” is correct, but conversely “coaches can’t execute the plays”. The third interception of the season for Malik was a perfect example of my point …… it took a way any chance to win the FSU game, and no reasonable person can blame Satterfield; Malik simply sailed the pass over the receiver.
Ironically, we have 4 talented RBs, but not a single QB who can can consistently execute an effective passing game. We have a couple of talented receivers, but regrettably the injuries thus far have reduced their ability to contribute each offensive possession.
Dez Tell is doing the very best that he can, but the loss of injury prone Jermaine Lole for the season speaks to what so many cautioned in the pre-season ……. we could ill afford any injuries, but that is precisely what has occurred thus far.
Interesting. But how would we know...MC gets all the snaps and all the PT and has for how many years now? And why did Jordan Travis transfer out once again? And Purdy not even come with a late change to FSU wasn't it?Hudson, Huggins-Bruce and Marshon Ford all played. Which talented receiver is out?
I was very patient with Satt knowing that Petrino did a terrible job recruiting at the end of his tenure. However by year 4 that excuse runs out of steam. Satt should have a full complement of his own players. For example by most accounts we do not have P5 backup QB.
Isn’t that one of the reasons that he brought Lance Thomas here?If CSS would get a good OC with a proven system so he could manage the team, I think he is a good fit.
If there is a talent deficiency in Satterfield's 4th year - then that's on him. If there is a lack of P5 depth at positions in Satterfield's 4th year - then that's on him. One receiver dominated UofL's secondary - Wilson was responsible for 55% of the receiving yards. "No DC could hide it"? You think maybe Brown could have mitigated it by doubling him - particularly in the red zone?Henry; while “there is some talent” on this team, it is deficient in too many key positions, something our opponents have seized on to the obvious weaknesses. Most of us questioned the talent in our secondary coming into this season, and all anyone needs to do, is examine the way both FSU QBs exploited our corners and safeties. Despite having 3 talented RBs, FSU had confidence their “rookie QB“ could dominate our coverage. That FSU passing efficiency exposed our lack of secondary talent, and there is no way any DC could hide it.
Malik is an exceptional athlete, so no one can argue his talent, but his inability to throw accurately with any consistency explains why he must rely on his feet rather than his arm for any sustainable success.
Your point about “players don’t call the plays” is correct, but conversely “coaches can’t execute the plays”. The third interception of the season for Malik was a perfect example of my point …… it took a way any chance to win the FSU game, and no reasonable person can blame Satterfield; Malik simply sailed the pass over the receiver.
Ironically, we have 4 talented RBs, but not a single QB who can can consistently execute an effective passing game. We have a couple of talented receivers, but regrettably the injuries thus far have reduced their ability to contribute each offensive possession.
Dez Tell is doing the very best that he can, but the loss of injury prone Jermaine Lole for the season speaks to what so many cautioned in the pre-season ……. we could ill afford any injuries, but that is precisely what has occurred thus far.
I know your fear and why you think we should give Satterfield more time. Satterfield was my first choice to replace Bobby 2.0. I thought he had the temperament and talent to get Louisville to near the top of the ACC. I was wrong.KHX: Fans losing hope? Regrettably that has been a common theme here at UL for several years now; basketball and football alike. Patience Is a virtue that seems to have eluded quite a few UL fans. Firing the coach becomes popular, but often fails to address the larger problem.
I believe there is “some talent” here, but sadly there is not enough to overcome the level of competition and our lack of depth compounds the skill issue. Lamar was so special, it concealed the inherit recruiting issues that Bobby experienced for several years.
Actually Henry, I have see those “head scratching“ calls by CSS ever since he arrived, and believe me I have shared in the same frustration that you and others have expressed. However, my focus has been more on the lack of execution, and across the board, particularly at the skill position. I get the “Captain Obvious thing”, but for this offense to be successful, these kids need to execute beyond their ability.
It starts with the QB, and despite the impressive statistical numbers that Malik accumulated coming into this season, in truth, his inability to read the defense, and his limitation throwing the football accurately on a consistent basis, reduces the play calling options for any coach. Malik is special when scrambling in the open field, as it becomes extremely difficult for any defense to contain …….but aside from that “Lamar type” performance, not sure how play calling applies there.
This UL football program needs increased talent, size and numbers to be competitive with ACC and UK; for the first time in quite a while there appears to be the level of recruiting success taking place here. Fire CSS a now and watch that class disappear. As for me, I am willing to give Scott the rest of the year before I abandon him.
When things go wrong in America, we blame the president. When a corporation is busted for tax fraud, we blame the CEO. When a local crime wave breaks out, we blame the mayor. When players fail to tackle, show effort, or don't execute, we blame the.... players?Both Hudson and Huggins-Bruce were injured and only saw limited action. How many times did they run critical 3rd down routes short of the first down marker. Some call it coaching; I call it player execution.
I don't believe for a second that the receivers executed the correct routes in practice and then, ran the wrong routes in the game. That's not the way it works - practiced enough with quality supervision, it becomes muscle memory. Simply put, players perform in games the way that they perform in practice.Both Hudson and Huggins-Bruce were injured and only saw limited action. How many times did they run critical 3rd down routes short of the first down marker. Some call it coaching; I call it player execution.