the picked pass was not a dumb call. You can argue it either way (wasn't it the great Cheech Marin in "Tin Cup" who famously said "sometimes par is good enough") but it just wasn't dumb. They knew it had a high chance of success of puttingthe game away and it just didn't happen.
If you want to pin something on the staff last night, blame them for their clock management. We came out of the locker room for the second half detemined to be conservative, and protect the lead, which is certainly a reasonable strategy there, except that if you're doing that you have to take the play clock down on almost every snap and shorten the number of plays in the game. We didn't. We consistently ran offensive plays with an average of 10 seconds left on the play clock, and each time we were stopped we raced the punting team out and snapped it to Wagner with 20 seconds left on the play clock. It would have served us right to lose the game in the last 40 seconds, which never, never would have been there had we even moved more slowly just punting the ball.
I'm glad I found this BL, b/c I wanted to comment on it before I got into that discussion about the INT - a had a buddy of mine with me at the game, who hadn't been to a UConn football game in a long, long, long time. We had a great, great time BTW, and he's going to be a ticket buyer next year. More of us, need to do this kind of thing......as usual I digress...
But he turned and looked at me in the third quarter, and said, damn, there's Pasqualoni for you - we're up - let the clock go down. In exactly the points you mention. But to do that, the players have to be conditioned and coached to go out there, and wait for the clock to hit 3,2....to snap the ball.
Here's what I think in a nutshell. Pasqualoni is a coach, that completely understands that players win games, and I trust his eye for talent. All you need to do is look at Chandler Whitmer. If we can get players, dozens and dozens of them, that play the game, like this kid can, we're going to be ok. I've never followed Pasqualoni closely, but the people that I know, that have, all warned me - that this kind of thing was going to happen with the team. The attention to this kind of detail, the play clock, timeouts, etc...while basic to the most competitive football people.....just isn't really focused on all that much by a coach like Pasqualoni who's made a career of recruiting players.
When you've got a roster of players that can make game changing plays.....the equivalent at whatever respective position, of throwing a 15+ yard completion on third and long, to ice a game in the 4thQ, when you've got a defender hanging on your legs - ? Don't need to focus on those little things, like clock management. It's the same thing that drives really good football coaches crazy, about how the really dumb coaches can make so much money in some places around the country. You don't really have to have a good understanding of the game details down to that level, as a head coach, if you're a good manager of people, and can recruit, to suit up a roster of very talented players year in and year out. But you take a guy like Pasqualoni, and have him work on the details of playing the position of defensive line, and you get a Kendall Reyes in the NFL. You take a guy like Deleone, and put him on the details of playing Tight End, and you get a Ryan Griffin in the NFL. We've put players in the NFL, before, but very few - very few - were actually NFL ready. Deon Anderson and Tyvon Branch, IMO, are the only ones that were really NFL ready out of college, Tyvon because of his natural gift of speed and tackling, and Deon for his gift of being a complete lunatic on the field.
Clearly, Pasqualoni has been able to head coach himself to a career record of 150 wins, 89 losses and 1 tie, with what apparently looks like an almost disregard for the game and play clock and the use of timeouts and things like that. A very good argument can also be made, that we're not over .500 yet as a program with Pasqualoni, because of it too.
Now contrast that coaching approach to the game, with the Randy Edsall approach that we're used to, and you get a fan base like we die hards are, that are tearing our hair out by the simple decisions to not run the play clock down on a punt when you're up 24-0 in the second half, or kneel on the ball with a little over a minute to go and possession,and an opponent that can't get it back, and a guy like my buddy, who has an understanding of football, looking at me and telling me that he isn't surprised that they're kicking the ball with more than half the play clock left and the game clock ticking up 24-0.
I highly doubt that Pasqualoni had any care at all about what the play clock was showing when the ball was being snapped on punts in the third quarter, or at any other time this season. These are things a coach like that doesn't think about.
Hopefully, somebody that reads this website, will point the clock timing thing out to the Special Teams coach.
I'm glad we won this game, and I"m glad we won with the players making the plays we did, becuase we needed it. In all three phases of the game. Players have to win games. Hopefully this 2012 has learned it, because there's no wiggle room left anymore.