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UConn football players, coaches lament failure to handle in-game adversity
Some highlights from the article:
“One bad thing and guys start to hang their heads,” receiver Kyle Buss said Saturday. “Instead of worrying about the next play and what they’re supposed to do on the next play, they’re sulking about the previous play. And then it just continues to happen play after play, and before we know it, we’re down 30 points.”
“We’ve just got to have a tougher mindset and a tougher mentality,” Pindell said Wednesday. “We can’t let adversity hit us. One person sees that, then it’s like a domino effect. You can’t show emotion [when things go wrong], you’ve just got to be able to respond.”
Several recent UConn games have followed a similar pattern: The Huskies score early, hold steady for a quarter or two, then collapse either just before or after halftime on the way to a loss (often by a wide margin). Against Cincinnati on Sept. 29, UConn scored first and then didn’t record another point, falling 49-7. Against Memphis the week after, the Huskies were tied until late in the first quarter on the way to a 45-14 defeat. After hanging on for all 60 minutes against South Florida, UConn blew a 14-3 lead to UMass in a 22-17 loss.
But Saturday’s game at Tulsa might have been the most stark example of the pattern. At the end of the first quarter, UConn led 10-0 having scored on consecutive drives while holding the opposing offense in check. After Tulsa picked up 7 points on an eight-play 75 yard drive, the Huskies responded with a field goal. But back-to-back Golden Hurricane touchdowns, back-to-back UConn punts and Pindell’s poor throw just before the half left the Huskies down two scores. Things fell apart further in the third quarter, when Tulsa notched three touchowns and held UConn scoreless.
The consensus among UConn players and coaches seems to be that the Huskies reacted poorly when they fell behind, hanging their heads and losing composure.
“We came out, shut them out in the first quarter, got a touchdown on offense, and we were like ‘OK, we’re feeling good, feeling good,’ ” defensive coordinator Bill Crocker said Wednesday. “And then all of a sudden, it’s almost like sometimes we’re waiting for something to happen, and then it did, and then it’s like ‘OK, we gave it our best.’ We’ve got to be able to fight through that and be a little bit mentally tougher than we’ve been.”
Some highlights from the article:
“One bad thing and guys start to hang their heads,” receiver Kyle Buss said Saturday. “Instead of worrying about the next play and what they’re supposed to do on the next play, they’re sulking about the previous play. And then it just continues to happen play after play, and before we know it, we’re down 30 points.”
“We’ve just got to have a tougher mindset and a tougher mentality,” Pindell said Wednesday. “We can’t let adversity hit us. One person sees that, then it’s like a domino effect. You can’t show emotion [when things go wrong], you’ve just got to be able to respond.”
Several recent UConn games have followed a similar pattern: The Huskies score early, hold steady for a quarter or two, then collapse either just before or after halftime on the way to a loss (often by a wide margin). Against Cincinnati on Sept. 29, UConn scored first and then didn’t record another point, falling 49-7. Against Memphis the week after, the Huskies were tied until late in the first quarter on the way to a 45-14 defeat. After hanging on for all 60 minutes against South Florida, UConn blew a 14-3 lead to UMass in a 22-17 loss.
But Saturday’s game at Tulsa might have been the most stark example of the pattern. At the end of the first quarter, UConn led 10-0 having scored on consecutive drives while holding the opposing offense in check. After Tulsa picked up 7 points on an eight-play 75 yard drive, the Huskies responded with a field goal. But back-to-back Golden Hurricane touchdowns, back-to-back UConn punts and Pindell’s poor throw just before the half left the Huskies down two scores. Things fell apart further in the third quarter, when Tulsa notched three touchowns and held UConn scoreless.
The consensus among UConn players and coaches seems to be that the Huskies reacted poorly when they fell behind, hanging their heads and losing composure.
“We came out, shut them out in the first quarter, got a touchdown on offense, and we were like ‘OK, we’re feeling good, feeling good,’ ” defensive coordinator Bill Crocker said Wednesday. “And then all of a sudden, it’s almost like sometimes we’re waiting for something to happen, and then it did, and then it’s like ‘OK, we gave it our best.’ We’ve got to be able to fight through that and be a little bit mentally tougher than we’ve been.”