Bonus Episode – Duke Wake Forest Jam Session

To forget about yesterday’s game, we’re posting a jam session. The tracks are:

Mississippi Sawyer or After a Bye Week for Christ’s Sake – guitar and banjo;

Sandy Boys or Turnover Duke – guitar and fiddle;

Kitchen Gal or Run to Adversity – guitar and banjo; and

New Five Cent Piece or Everything has an Expiration Date – guitar and fiddle.

Listen here.

2021 Game Recap – Cut the Cord

I’m going to skip the recap of yesterday’s fourth straight painful loss and get right to what needs to be said. Sorry if you were looking forward to Five Things, but now isn’t the time for that. (We did record a jam session yesterday which I will try to post tonight.)

During yesterday’s game, I said I on Twitter that I would not hold back in my game recap. Here’s what I said:

That’s the tweet!

I don’t remember what specifically caused me to lose my patience and self-control, but it’s about time I come out and say what I’ve been hinting at all season. So, as promised, here it is – it is time for Duke football to move on from David Cutcliffe. The Blue Devils need a new coach. We can appreciate all that David Cutcliffe did from 2008 until 2018 while recognizing that he’s holding Duke back and an impediment to winning. I’ve been talking about trends all season and I’ve been doing it for a reason – once the Blue Devils lost to Charlotte, I had a sense that Cutcliffe wouldn’t fix the problems that had been haunting this team since 2018-ish and we’d see a repeat of what we’ve seen since 2019. That premonition turned out to be accurate when North Carolina absolutely demolished Duke – Cutcliffe won’t make changes. He won’t make adjustments. He won’t adapt to the changing football landscape. And the results speak for themselves – blowout loss after blowout loss. It’s pathetic. We’re every bit as bad as we were when Cutcliffe came to Durham.

If the university cares about football, I don’t know how this can be allowed to continue. I’ve watched the Blue Devils regularly since the 1990s, I have a vague memory of knowing that Duke did well real during Spurrier’s last season, so I can say this with a good deal of authority – this is one of the worst teams I’ve ever watched. This Blue Devils team is just bad. There’s no way around it. This Duke team is getting beat, manhandled and pushed around just like all those teams under Franks and Roof did.

The key difference, though, is this team has a lot more talent than those bad Goldsmith, Franks and Roof teams that went winless. Those teams were often younger, smaller and slower than the other team at every position. That isn’t the case here – our OL and DL can match up with their opposition from a size perspective and the corners play well in coverage (aside from constantly being left alone in single coverage which just about every corner is going to get beat on). We have a good running back, a real good one, and a quarterback who can complete a pass and run (but the staff doesn’t let him, because, you know, idiocy). There is absolutely no excuse for the failure of this offensive staff to put points on the board and to give up 30+ each week.

So, why is it happening? Well, I guess we will do Five Things after all and put the blame where it belongs – on the head coach. Here are Five Things that are wrong with the program right now:

  1. Cut promotes people based on time served, not on merit. Zac Roper and Jeff Faris are the perfect examples of bad promotions. Why do we have a former special teams coordinator and a walk-on safety running our offense instead of a former QB or a WR? It’s a good question without a good answer. When you’re on a team or part of a business, and a university football program is a business, you have to produce. Cut has seemed content since 2015 to let people advance based on time served as opposed to merit and performance. That’s a terrible way to run a business. Produce or go home. If results aren’t expected and demanded, you start to slip. Then you fall. That’s what’s happening now. We are falling right into adversity.
  2. Cut doesn’t hold people accountable (and this is going to bleed into numbers three and four, because there’s a lot to unpack here). How in the world Jeff Faris still has a job after UNC, UVA and Wake is beyond me. His game management yesterday was terrible. I don’t want to go into the bad plays, but what he’s doing isn’t working. But it isn’t entirely on him, it’s an extension of what happened when Zac Roper ran the offense. And it only took wasting a generational talent at quarterback followed by a jump pass that cost Duke a bowl game to make a change there. Wasting talent is what happens when you don’t hold your staff accountable. Before I leave this point, am I the only one who has noticed that Roper seems to be hovering around Cut all throughout the game? Does he still have some involvement in the offense? If so, why? Look, Faris may be a good person and a nice guy, but, like Donny in The Big Lebowski, he’s out of his element.
  3. The defensive scheme has been figured out. We’ve been in a 4-2-5 for years. You have gaps because you don’t have a third LB to fill them. Teams know where those gaps are and run plays to force the LB to come in on runs or drop into coverage on a WR on pass plays. They then go to where the LB isn’t (or just heave it on single coverage). The result – big plays and blowouts. Just like Faris shouldn’t be running the offense, Matt Guerrieri isn’t doing a good job. We keep getting burned on the same plays we’ve gotten burned on since 2015. We also can’t disguise our blitzes. And we don’t adapt. Again, Guerrieri may be a nice guy, but his defense is giving up a lot of points. Despite that, we keep seeing the same press coverage week after week. I’ve had enough. We need to make a change.
  4. We’re bad at situational football. I won’t go into the poor use of timeouts and bad use of the Moore package all season, but I will say that the kicking teams yesterday was the worst I’ve seen them. If we brought Scott Boylan in to return kicks, why are we letting Stinson return kicks from the end zone to put us in worse field position? Why not take the touchback? And running backwards on a return (I can’t remember if Stinson did that or not, but it happened)? What in the world is going on? We supposedly have fast players, why not let them have a shot? No knock on Stinson, but there are types of law I don’t practice because those areas don’t mesh well with what I do on a day-to-day basis and because I don’t have enough experience in those areas to do them comfortably. Same here with Stinson – it just isn’t his thing. The staff has to do a better job of coaching players on when to return and has to put players in situations to make plays. I’m not seeing a lot of that from the kicking teams. And, again, it only took until the eighth game of the season for the staff to put someone else back there. You guys watch film all week and practice this stuff, but you’re just now figuring it out?
  5. No energy. I have some comments here that could be deemed criticisms of the players. That isn’t the case – pay close attention and you’ll see that. Cut sure doesn’t seem to care on the sidelines. He looks disinterested and not into the game. The team seems to be taking a lead from that because they don’t look like they care on the sidelines, either. I think it’s pretty obvious that Cut has lost the team and the players are going through the motions as a result. But part of why I said that this team is one of the worst to watch is because of the apparent lack of leadership from the players. No one is acting like Koby Quansah, Carlos Wray or Max McCaffrey would when things got tough. As rough as some of those Goldsmith seasons were, the players would fight and compete. They just didn’t have the depth to get more wins. This team wasn’t going to be much better than 4-8, but when you have a chance to get to 5 wins early on, you have to dig deep and come out angry. You have to demand accountability from your teammates and lead by example. I haven’t seen that from the coach or the team this season. Now, I’m not pinning this on the players. This is a reflection of a poor culture that Cut has let take hold. He’s accountable for this. But I will say that the players have to start leading around Cut and take control of this. I don’t see these guys snapping a six game losing streak like we saw happen in 2017. This is a culture problem and it has to change.

There’s no way Ms. King can bring Cut back next season. Cut won’t do what it takes to fix the program. The trends show he isn’t capable of it. If it were up to me, I’d go ahead and cut the cord now and name Boyette or Frey interim coach. Boyette has had a lot of success with RBs over the years and Frey’s OL has been a bright spot in an otherwise disappointing season. It’s been time for a change for a good while now, and yesterday took away any reason to give Cut more time. Thanks for all you’ve done coach, but it’s time for someone else to lead the Blue Devils. I hope you enjoy retirement and come back to Durham often. I’ll remember the good years and won’t fixate on what happened at the end of your time as head coach. Again, I appreciate all you’ve done, but it’s time for a change.

Let me know what you think about what I think in the comments or on Twitter.

Go Duke!

2021 Game Previews – Duke versus Wake Forest

Remember when Duke used to beat Wake Forest? It started in 2012 when, after a decade or so of losing to Wake, the Blue Devils ripped off four straight and five out of six from 2012 to 2017. Well, times have changed. Dave Clawson has, like a lot of current ACC coaches, had David Cutcliffe’s number. 2018 saw Wake demolish Duke by 52 points. 2019 was much closer, but that score is misleading because the Blue Devils were helped by two touchdowns in the kicking game. Other than that, the boys from Durham didn’t do much. The only saving grace about 2020 was Duke didn’t lose to Wake – because the Blue Devils didn’t play Wake. It’s the little things in life, right?

Turning back to my habit of looking at trends when making game predictions, the trends say that Wake is a program on the rise. Clawson is currently two games over .500 at Wake and has taken this team to five straight bowl games. Wake comes in 7-0 and a perfect 4-0 in the ACC. While Clawson hasn’t been great in conference play, take out his first two seasons in which he went 2-14, and he’s just about even in the ACC. That’s pretty darned good.

Since Wake first cracked bowl eligibility under Clawson in 2016, Duke has gone off the rails. With just two winning seasons during that time, Cut has coached the Blue Devils to 29 wins and 39 losses. The conference record is an abysmal 11-34. That is just about awful no matter how you try to spin it.

Given how Duke has looked in two of its three conference losses this year, I don’t see the Blue Devils coming away with a win. This Wake Forest team has won about every way a team can win. They started by beating teams in a convincing fashion – look at the scores against Florida State and Virginia. They also put up SEVENTY against Army. And they pulled out two close wins against Louisville and Syracuse. Those are the kind of wins that good teams get. And, checks notes, Duke isn’t getting any of those wins in conference and hasn’t in what feels like forever.

So, what’s my prediction for Saturday? Well, Wake wins. No question about that. What’s the final score? Look, I don’t particularly like doing these because it isn’t easy to get them right consistently. But, since I know you guys like them, I’m taking Wake 42-13. Sorry, but I don’t see the Blue Devils doing much more so long as we don’t let our mobile quarterback run the ball to take pressure off of Mataeo. Maybe we need to think carefully about who calls the plays on offense? Maybe the head coach needs to stop promoting people because they have been there for a long time?

Let me know what you think in the comments or on Twitter.

Go Duke!

2021 State of the Program – Just Past Midseason Report

This has been a tale of many seasons for Duke. 2021 started poorly, very poorly, with a home loss to Charlotte. While many of us became concerned that loss would cost the Blue Devils bowl eligibility, a three game winning streak gave us hope that this team could squeak out a few wins here and there over the remaining eight and return to the postseason for the first time since 2018. But three straight conference losses have most of us thinking that a bowl just isn’t going to happen. When a team loses by more than 30 to its biggest rival and gets shut out, while giving up almost 50, to another division opponent, you don’t expect to go to a bowl. Add on another blown lead late against Georgia Tech, and there isn’t much reason for optimism.

So, what are we to make of team after seven games? Well, despite the 3-4 record, I’d argue that this team has a solid core. Let’s take a look at the offense first.

If I had to give out grades for each position, the running back gets an A+. The QB gets an A- (the low score is the result of the coaching staff using the QB poorly which I detail below). The offensive line gets a B+. Add in a decent receiving corps (we don’t have breakaway speed, hence the “decent” characterization), and any objective view of the offense has to be generally positive. I realize I didn’t give the receivers a grade. In lieu of letters, this unit gets a “P” for “Pass”. That isn’t a pun – I’m grading the receivers on a pass / no pass scale.

The defense, too, has improved during the season, particularly the defensive line. Despite a propensity to give up a lot of points (and there isn’t a way to sugarcoat that), this is an up-and-coming group that would accomplish more but for the fact that we remain in a 4-2-5 that everyone has figured out at this point. Could we try something different? Cutcliffe has been at the school for more than a decade, so why don’t we have more linebackers? How about we do something with three linemen and more safeties? Why not a 3-3-5? Anyway, I digress. Back to my point – I like a lot of the individual components on the defense, but this unit gives up way too many points. I don’t think it’s because the players are doing anything poorly, it’s just that the defense seems to be where the OL was last year – figuring itself out. We’re a developmental program. It happens.

As for the kicking teams, we have the best punter in the country. We have a good kicker, but Cut mismanaged the situation at UVA and cost us points. Seems like he probably lost the team with that. I don’t know for a fact that he lost the team, but they sure didn’t look the same after the missed field goal. Maybe I’m an idiot, but I can’t understand putting in a left-footed kicker to kick from the left hash. College football is all about emotion and momentum, and Cut flushed both down the toilet with that call.

If you take a look at the preceding paragraphs, you’re probably trying to comprehend how Duke managed to lose two close games to Charlotte and Georgia Tech and get blown out by UNC and UVA. Well, you’re not the only one. This isn’t like the Franks and Roof days where there was a lack of depth and talent. This team has enough talent that it should be able to be average enough to get six wins. So, why does this team look so bad? Why are we continuing to get blown out in conference game after conference game?

The only answer I have is coaching. This staff just isn’t getting much out of the players. I can’t say that the players aren’t trying to win every play or putting in the work because, unlike last year, it looks like they are doing everything they can to get a win each week (UVA game aside). Not counting my complaint about Cut benching Charlie Ham, here are Five Things that remain a problem for this team and have been since last season (if not longer):

  1. Penalties. We get penalized way, way too much. My research has us at SEVEN penalties per game. That’s abysmal. And it screams a lack of discipline.
  2. A mobile quarterback who isn’t running the ball. Why did we stop running Gunnar after the Kansas game? I get that you don’t want him to get hurt, but the yardage is there. Let Gunnar run the ball a few times. He looked real comfortable against Kansas, and while we can’t afford an injury, playing scared is playing to lose. And, checks notes, that’s sure what the Blue Devils are doing right now. Why is the offensive strategy built around fear? Well, let’s take a look at number three …
  3. Not developing quarterback depth. What happened to the days of Renfree, Boone and Connette? Sirk goes down in 2016 and a future first round pick steps in. Since then? We’ve been afraid to run our quarterbacks because we don’t have depth at the position. I’m not sure why Luca Diamont isn’t playing, so I won’t comment on that, but I will say that the quarterback guru has hit a rough patch. For a guy who has produced so many NFL QBs to have so little depth at such a critical position is a damning statement about where the program is at year 14 of the Cutcliffe era.
  4. The Blue Devils’ staff isn’t adapting. Twice this season Duke lost leads in the 4th quarter after retaking a lead. Why? Because the staff continues to employ the same defensive scheme that exposes our corners. Opposing teams figured it out and, just like not finding a way to cover the wheel route, our staff hasn’t. It’s the same with the offense. The predictability problems that started to seep in during the Daniel Jones era continue to haunt the program now. Cut has to go outside of his “people” and get someone with some fresh offensive ideas. Otherwise, we better get used to being at the bottom of the Coastal.
  5. We have a retention issue. While watching some of the Clemson-Pitt game yesterday, I was surprised to learn that C. J. Spiller and Tajh Boyd are on the Clemson coaching staff. It surprised me because I didn’t know that players who were significant contributors could be a part of your team’s staff. Can someone explain to me why all of the players who played for Cutcliffe who now coach aren’t dressing up for the Blue Devils on Saturdays? Why don’t we have Anthony Boone, Takoby Cofield, Carlos Wray and Max McCaffrey on staff? You don’t think Braxton Deaver or David Reeves would come coach the tight ends? Those are guys who were key contributors and know what it takes to win in Durham. Are you telling me they wouldn’t help recruiting and player development?

To sum it up, I’m giving the team a C-. I expected struggles this season and didn’t expect more than 4 wins, so I won’t give them a D or an F. That’s just not fair because this was going to be a tough season. The conference schedule is brutal and we had to expect a down year.

That said, I didn’t expect the staff to find a way to give away two wins. I also thought that this group would play better against UNC and UVA. But those two games made one thing clear – the program is heading in the wrong direction. Duke isn’t suffering the kind of losses Virginia Tech has had this year – six points to West Virginia, three points to Notre Dame and five points to Syracuse. Those types of loses (which are what I expected from the Blue Devils) would tell me the team would learn from the close losses and start winning games next season. But we’re a long, long way from hope for the 2022 season. And it all goes back to coaching.

Let me know what you think in the comments or on Twitter.

Go Duke!

2021 Game Recap – Duke Loses (Yet Again)

I’ll be honest with you, I feel like this blog is turning into a form of therapy. I come here and vent my frustrations about a long-term relationship that is causing me a lot of pain, stress and worry. I’m not talking about my soon to be 18 year marriage, I’m talking about my relationship with Duke football. (The line about the marriage is a joke Been married for 18 years and we’re all good.) This loss may have been the worst since … Take your pick of one from last season. I don’t know how to begin to recap the fact that the Blue Devils put up a goose egg against UVA. But I’ll try.

Let’s get to Five Things.

Here are the Five Things I liked:

  1. Um … Well … Let me just try and see if I can …
  2. The game ended (h/t to Duke Rivals for that one).
  3. The reasons not to make significant changes to the staff are all gone. I’ve been talking about trends a lot all season, and I’ll keep doing it, because the trends tell the story. And that story is that the rest of the ACC has moved in front of Duke. Since conference play started, the Blue Devils are 0-3 which continues a trend of mediocre conference play dating back to 2017 (I’ll give the 2016 team a pass because of all the injuries that season). If the administration cares about football, it can’t allow this to continue. Cutcliffe has shown that he can win in Durham, but his reluctance to make significant changes on the staff is holding the team back. The repeated losses, the margin of defeat and the ugly nature of a lot those losses means that Cut and his staff have allowed the program to crash and burn to the bottom of the Coastal. The staff isn’t capable of winning games. Changes have to be made.
  4. The OL didn’t give up a sack until the second half (if memory serves).
  5. That’s it — I’m all tapped out.

Here are the Five Things I Didn’t Like:

  1. This game was so painful that I stopped watching at the end of the 3rd quarter which is something that I almost never do. I’ve been a loyal fan since I was a kid, but this was too much for me. The Blue Devils’ offense was so inept, the defense was completely unable to get a stop and the game was generally so painful that I couldn’t take it. I don’t how you come out and lay an egg like that after a close loss against Georgia Tech. My sense is that the staff lost control of the team. I’ll stand to be corrected on that, but the outcome speaks for itself. Pulling Charlie Ham will cause things like that to happen. Just saying …
  2. Jeff Faris doesn’t understand situational football. I mean, what the heck were you doing? Duke is down 27-0 at the end of the first half (about two minutes to go) and has all of its timeouts. Gunnar throws underneath for 5 yards and a timeout is immediately called. Okay, but why? Why not just call a play and burn clock in the event that you aren’t able to get a first down? Then another 4 yard pass and it’s 3rd & 1 with 1:42 and you call … Another timeout? Are you trying to give UVA the ball with a lot of time to score? Well, if you were, great, because that’s what happened. And can we talk about the only good series you had in the 3rd quarter that you wasted by going huddle for a direct snap to Mataeo on 2nd down followed by a designed run on 3rd that everyone and their blind mother saw coming? Gunnar had been throwing great on that drive. How about keep calling Jontavis Robertson’s number?
  3. Continued lack of discipline. Drops and penalties killed this team. Add in bad situational football and you end up getting a whooping. And that’s what that was. The Blue Devils got whooped and the sloppy play that has been a problem all season didn’t help.
  4. The same old message. I’m sure Cut will take the blame for this and talk about how he needs to prepare the team better. He’ll say he knows what good football is. But is that message resulting in wins? Is it making the team better? Is anything changing? If we keep hearing the same thing week after week followed by the same result week after week, what reason do we have to believe that Cut is going to turn this around? Look, I love everything that Cut did for the program. I respect everything he did for the program. But we are knee-deep in Franks and Roof territory. Look at all the conference losses and the margin of defeat in those losses from the last conference game of 2018 to this season and you can see that we’re just as bad now as we were 20 years ago. I’d argue that the way Duke is losing now is worse than a lot of what we saw from Franks and Roof. And it isn’t acceptable if we care about football.
  5. The Blue Devils are getting embarrassed. 38-7 against Carolina coming off of three straight wins. A tough loss to Georgia Tech followed up by a loss of almost 50. This is embarrassing. And it hurts.

Well, that’s it for a while because we have a bye next week.

Go Duke!

2021 Game Previews – Duke versus UVA

Duke sure started the season hot at 3-1, but that seems like a distant memory at this point. The Blue Devils are 3-3 after a blowout loss to UNC and another blown lead against Georgia Tech. Tailspin would be a generous way to describe the feeling most of us have at this point. Even the usually upbeat Section 17 crew was pretty pessimistic in its most recent podcast episode. But not me, I’m never one who comes off as a downer and assumes the worst will happen … Yeah, right. This is me we’re talking about.

For my preview this week, I’m going to turn to what I’ve been doing a lot of this season — trends. Since Bronco Mendenhall arrived at UVA in 2016, the Cavaliers have gone 34-34, made it to 3 bowl games and captured the Coastal in 2016. Even in UVA’s worst season under Mendenhall, a 2-10 campaign in 2016, the Cavs still managed to beat Duke. In fact, Mendenhall has never lost to the Blue Devils. Let that sink in for a minute – not even with Daniel Jones could Cutcliffe get a win against Mendenhall. While I like the players on this team a lot, the trends tell a story – Mendenhall is outcoaching Cutcliffe.

Can Duke win this game? Of course. The Blue Devils have a good offensive unit that can score points pretty consistently. A good QB, RB and WR corps (including recent usage of our TEs) can do a lot of damage. Duke’s defense is getting better each week which is another good sign. Factor in the improved OL and you have to think that our boys from Durham have a shot. After all, this UVA team has been pretty inconsistent all season. That said, the Cavs have a real good QB (again, so do the Blue Devils) and won two close games in two weeks. That’s important to keep in mind if this game ends up tight late. Good teams overcome. Bad teams find ways to lose (like repeatedly covering zero instead of conceding the FG to send the game to OT).

To cut to the chase, because I’m starting to feel like I say the same darned thing each week, I like Duke to hang in there, but for UVA to pull it out in the third or fourth. It will probably be like one of those games I grew up watching in the 90s. The Blue Devils would give me hope for a while, but then let the game slip away late. With that in mind, I’m taking UVA to win by a score of 38-27.

Go Duke!

2021 Game Recap – Duke Loses to Georgia Tech

My game recap is going to be a little abbreviated today because I missed a lot of this game thanks to a trip to VT to watch the Hokies play the Irish. Unfortunately for me, I caught the end of Duke blowing a fourth quarter lead to Georgia Tech to lose what should have been the Blue Devils’ first conference win of the season. I vented a lot of my frustration on Twitter after the game, so let’s go straight to Five Things.

Five Things I liked:

  1. Despite going down 14-0 early in the game, Duke fought back and didn’t quit. The Blue Devils outscored Georgia Tech 27-17 after spotting the Yellow Jackets two scores. That tells me that this team doesn’t quit. And you need that during a season like this one.
  2. Mataeo gonna Mataeo. 43 carries. 152 yards. 1 touchdown. 8 receiving yards. 2,000 plus total rushing yards in his career. Mataeo can ball.
  3. The defense is getting better (wheel route notwithstanding). We got two picks. Despite a poor start to the season, the defense has shown an ability to make plays. (Capitalizing on them is another matter all together which we discuss below.)
  4. I like being right. No, I’m not talking about predicting a loss. I’m talking about my early season prediction that the Blue Devils would lose a lot of close games but would show signs of life. That tells me while this season may be rough, things could well go differently for Duke next year. The real question is who will be around to lead the Blue Devils during what could be a season like 2012 was.
  5. Our QB was 22/29 for 2 touchdowns. Sure, there was one pick at the end of the game, but that happens in those situations. With a guy who is that efficient under center, Duke should have a chance to steal a game or two during the second half of the season. But that probably won’t be enough to get us to a bowl which takes us to …

Five Things I Didn’t Like:

  1. The Blue Devils gave up another 4th quarter lead. Just like with Charlotte, Duke had a chance to seal a win and, just like Charlotte, the defense didn’t hold. While some people who probably know a little more about football than I do have told me the defensive play call wasn’t a bad one, I’m not sure how, on third down, the DC leaves a corner in man coverage on a deep ball. Sure, a 36 yard toss for a TD isn’t easy, but college quarterbacks practice this. Plus, it seems like the Blue Devils always get beat in such situations, so why not drop 7 or 8 and be willing to give up the field goal to prevent the TD? Take it OT – the offense has played well. I don’t get it. I just don’t get it.
  2. Rough day for a good kicker. I saw some players slip at times, so I’m going to chalk it up to just a bad day for Charlie Ham. Even Ross Martin missed some field goals now and then.
  3. Why aren’t we giving Mataeo the ball on 4th and short? Looking at No. 2 of what I liked, he is pretty darned good and an effective player. Not letting Mataeo take the ball in those situations is really, really hard to comprehend. Play calling has been an issue all year and not letting your best back touch the ball in short yardage is a symptom of a larger disease. So, too, is not turning turnovers into points. And not giving your TE the ball enough. I could go on for a while, but I think you guys get the point. But speaking of Duke’s situational football woes …
  4. This team could easily be 5-1, easily. Two blown leads in the 4th quarter has the Blue Devils trending downward and away from a bowl game. Better play calling has this team at 5-1. Losing close games the same way year after year indicates that coaches aren’t making adjustments, aren’t making changes and aren’t good at situational football. Good teams overcome, bad teams find ways to lose. The Duke coaching staff sure seems to be good at finding ways to lose. That might explain why less than 12,000 showed up to watch the Blue Devils lose.
  5. Duke lost another conference game. The Blue Devils haven’t had a winning conference records since 2014 when Duke finished second in the Coastal with a 5-3 record. Let that sink in for a minute – 6 seasons with a losing conference record. That’s pretty bad no matter how you try and spin it. Last week I said look at trends and, when you do that, you see that the Blue Devils are not competitive in conference. To borrow an old phrase, you are what your record says you are and Duke’s conference record isn’t very good. How do you feel about your conference record, random fan?
Not great, Bob.

Let’s hope the Blue Devils bounce back, because UVA won’t be easy.

Go Duke!

Interview – Bonus Episode with Robert Brickey

If you’re my age or older, you know who Robert Brickey is.

Robert Brickey in action.

If you’re a youngster, you missed out. Robert Brickey was a great player at Duke who was a lot of fun to watch.

See? I told you he was fun to watch.

Turns out that Robert Brickey isn’t just a former Blue Devil basketball player, he’s also a Duke football fan. Robert was kind enough to take some time out of a Thursday evening to talk about basketball, the legacy of his jersey number, number 21, finances, life and football. This was a fun talk with a great Blue Devil. I know you’ll enjoy it as much as I did.

Listen here.

2021 Game Previews – Duke versus Georgia Tech

I tried to do an audio version of this, but it turned into me ranting and being a little too negative. So, with that in mind, I’m turning back to the written word. My preview will be short and sweet because there are really only two things that you have to look at coming into this game: 1) inconsistency from Georgia Tech; and 2) the larger trend for Duke.

Let’s start with Georgia Tech. Sure, they have been inconsistent. A loss to Northern Illinois, a win against Kennesaw State, a nail-biter against Clemson, a big victory against UNC followed by an embarrassing loss to Pitt screams inconsistency and a likely loss. But, while the Yellow Jackets have put together some bad losses, they have better wins and beat a UNC team that … you remember how that ended. Add to that the pattern of alternating losses and wins and you realize that Georgia Tech is on track to get a win on Saturday.

Now, let’s turn to the Blue Devils’ general trend since the 2019 season and why that’s important for Saturday – blowout losses in conference. Here’s what happened in 2019 – three blowout losses (defined as a margin of victory by the opposing team of at least 20 points) (and the Wake game could have been one but for DPJ’s play on the kicking teams):

Take a look at 2020 and we see the same general pattern:

I count a total of five such losses (BC by 20, UNC by 32, Georgia Tech by 23, Miami by 48 and FSU by 21). And 2021 is off to that same concerning trend with a 31 point loss to UNC.

All of this should worry us coming into Saturday. The coaching staff (notice I’m not saying anything about the players) are not able to field competitive games against ACC teams that have changed coaches in recent years. While other teams are moving forward, we’re still running the same bubble screens we ran when just getting to a bowl game was almost unheard of in Durham.

While Georgia Tech has been inconsistent, the inability of the Duke coaching staff to compete in conference has me thinking that Georgia Tech is likely to win this game, inconsistency issues notwithstanding. The Blue Devils have a chance and can pull it off, but not if we keep running WR screens, botching the Moore package and failing to let Gunnar run the ball. Until we get a different approach to the offense, expect the trends to continue.

My prediction – Georgia Tech 33, Duke 13.

But I want the Blue Devils, the players, to read this, get angry and use this as motivation to win. Make me eat my words, guys – I’ll be more than happy to do it. I’m rooting like crazy for you guys and won’t stop just because of a bad loss. Bull City Coordinators may be pessimistic, but we’ve still got your back.

Go Duke!

2021 Game Recap – The Real Game on Saturday

To try and get the terrible taste of the last game out of our collective mouth, I was going to post a video of my daughter scoring a goal in her soccer game on Saturday followed by her brother, the “referee”, celebrating with her, but I’d have to pay $84 to upgrade the website plan and I don’t want to do that. So, instead of a video, I’m doing another audio breakdown of the real game on Saturday. I hope you all enjoy it.

Go Duke!