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Showing posts with label Matt Stinchcomb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Stinchcomb. Show all posts

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Analyzing the O Line

One of the problems with my job is that I'm hardly qualified to explain the more technical Xs and Os of football, but issues like Georgia's offensive line problems remain an issue I feel obligated to explore. That job is made tougher because Georgia's line coach is, well, not a big fan of folks like me.

One of the great aspects of my job, however, is that when I can't get answers firsthand, I still get to call someone else who knows a great deal about the issues and get their insight instead.

So when it comes to explaining Georgia's problems running the ball behind what was expected to be a solid offensive line, I knew just who to ask -- former Georgia lineman Matt Stinchcomb.

Stinchcomb is not only one of the top linemen in Georgia history and a recent Circle of Honor inductee, but he's also an analyst for the SEC Network. Be sure to check him out on the pregame show at noon this week before Georgia takes on Tennessee.

In the meantime, Stinchcomb was kind enough to break down some of the problems we're seeing with Georgia's line. Here's what he had to say...

David Hale: So I'm assuming you've seen a bit of Georgia this year. What gives with the offensive line?

Matt Stinchcomb: It started this year against Oklahoma State with the injury to Sturdivant, and you start moving guys around trying to plug and play. Vince Vance is coming off a knee injury. There's still some instability in their lineup. Cordy Glenn was the left tackle the last two games. What was thought to be a strength was compromised in Week 1. Ben was injured at the center spot in training camp. It shows up mainly, I think, in the run game. They're protecting the passer pretty well. You look at the South Carolina game, Vance had some difficulties in that game in pass protection, but by and large, they've done a good job of keeping Cox clean, but the running game has struggled. Losing one of the best running backs we've see in a while -- Knowshon Moreno was a unique talent, and it's been a challenge for Georgia to replace him.

DH: I don't claim to know much about the Xs and Os of blocking, but why would a line struggle in run blocking but be so successful at pass blocking?

MS: It's difficult to say because it's not as if in pass protection they're just running man protections and you know who you've got so there's very little tradeoff. You've got to work in symphony with the guy next to you as well in the passing game. So that's a challenging question that's hard for me to answer.

When you look at the running game, there is a more assertive aspect of your blocking scheme. If you're unfamiliar with the position that you're playing, maybe that leads to some hesitancy. That being said you really didn't see that manifested in years past when Georgia had to move guys around. It's not been just a static lineup, but they were able to overcome that. Maybe that's because they had more stability at the tailback position.

You look at it this year, going into the season, you know you're going to have a new quarterback -- it doesn't matter if he's a fifth-year senior, he doesn't have a lot of starting experience. Richard Samuel and Caleb King, neither had a really substantial role in the running game in years past, so you have new faces at the running back position. The mainstay, you thought, was going to be the offensive line, but that changes early in the second half of the opener. So you get two quarters and some change out of your lone known commodity, and now all of a sudden that's in flux.

So really offensively the only established face that you know of that's a playmaker is the guy that's been making plays, and that's A.J. Green. It's not that everybody else is not capable of it, it's just it's new to them. You have new tailbacks and guys in new positions. Cordy Glenn played guard and right tackle at times, but now all of a sudden he's protecting his quarterback's blind side. It's not as if this is the offense they anticipated going into the season -- certainly not in terms of production, but also the roles and personnel. It was different starting in the opener.

DH: There's been problems beyond just running the ball for the O line. For a good bit of the season, they've struggled with penalties, too. False starts and stuff like that, it seems really surprising from a unit coached by a stickler for details like Stacy Searels. But I was thinking maybe all the shifting around and concern over the offensive struggles, does it almost become a situation where, as a lineman, you're thinking about so many other things that that first step sort of slips your mind?

MS: You got it. Absolutely. My senior year when I was at Georgia -- I struggled with false starts really throughout my career. I was so anxious. There's a number of reasons why it goes on, but ultimately it comes down to a lack of focus. You get so honed in on other aspects of your play that there you are, up at the line of scrimmage, and dang if you don't forget the snap count because you're thinking about what will happen post-snap. Next thing you know, you've got guys flinching, especially in passing downs, especially when you're in shotgun, but even in short yardage.

Whenever you see a unit, and this might be what's happening, you start to press a little bit. You can see it when a quarterback is pressing, he's maybe forcing some throws and floating the ball a little bit. In offensive line play, when guys get anxious and they know they're being counted upon, and next thing you know, they're getting a little bit of a head start against the rules.

I think it's probably a combination of a lot of things, but it's basically what you pointed out, that it ends up being a lack of focus on the first thing that has to happen, and that's getting off on the ball.

DH: Mark Richt and Mike Bobo have mentioned that the problems can certainly go beyond just the line and the tailbacks. Obviously play calling comes into it, but the tight ends are young and the fullbacks have to handle their jobs. Does everyone sort of share in some of the blame?

MS: Here's the thing about football in general -- it's pretty tightly strung. You're going to have difficulty establishing any silos where there isn't any interdependence. It's hard to say, oh our defense is playing great, and it's got absolutely nothing to do with our offensive play or vice versa. That's a bunch of bull. One impacts the other, incredibly so. The three phases of the game interact tremendously.

The same can be said for subsets of those phases. You look at the running game, you can go out there and say the offensive line has played poorly, but it very easily could have been that the backs haven't done a very good job of hitting the hole. Or the opposite is true where you may have a great running game, where your running back has a tremendous outing, and you didn't block that great. He just made them look really good.

I think it goes back to what I was trying to point out before. You come into the season, and you think you know what you've got. You know you're going to have some new faces in other spots, but you think you know what you've got at least on the offensive line, and now all of a sudden, even that has some new faces and some new roles for those faces.

It's got a cumulative effect. You have a couple tailbacks who aren't used to having as significant or as substantial a role, you have some guys playing different positions up front, and it's a little bit disjointed. Everybody hasn't played a lot together, hasn't played next to this guy very much, you have Caleb King coming in a couple games into the season and he's still trying to get into a rhythm. Everybody is still trying to develop some kind of a, you don't want to say a routine, but a rhythm. That's kind of what it looks like out on the field is that they've yet to have the right mix to where everything starts to click a little bit outside of, well, throw to 8.

DH: I did some research and looking at the five games so far, well over half of Georgia's drives are five plays or less -- either three-and-outs or turnovers or quick scores. Does having so many short drives make it hard for the line or the runners to get in a rhythm and maybe that's a reason they'd be struggling?

MS: It's true. That's exactly right. All of these are reasons. None of them can really be excuses, nor do I think anyone is going to propose they are. But absolutely that's part of it. Guys, especially at the running back position, the more they play, the more they get a feel for the game, I know as a player, that's one of the hardest things in the world to do. As a freshman, I platooned with another guy and you kind of get out of a rhythm. When you get a little bit removed from the game, it's hard to kind of re-introduce yourself to it. I've always wondered how defensive players do it where they can come in and out of the game when you have no idea what the flow of the game feels like.

You don't play a guy the same way in the first quarter as you do in the third quarter. You only get a feel for that as the game evolves, and you only get a feel for that as the game evolves. That's the same for the running backs. Maybe the holes seem to be developing on the back side a lot more than the front side. You can see that from the sideline maybe, but you can't feel that from the sideline, and there's a difference there.

DH: So looking forward, what's the longterm prognosis?

MS: Offensively, these guys -- with Ealey coming in there, there's a potential for there to be an establishment of something. At the end of the day, it's like skipping engines. You can see it there, but you see it in flashes. It's not synchronized. I think that's the ultimate overall assessment for Georgia, especially on offense. It hasn't lined up yet.

It's like an in-line six. You can see one or two cylinders are hitting and you're dropping a cylinder. It's not going to run smooth, but it's going to run. You see these guys, and they're able to put it up, they're just not able to put it up with any consistency yet. I think that shows up in the lack of long drives and with the spotty play. It doesn't mean they're not capable of it. They lack consistency, not capability. I view it how I view my golf game. It's frustrating why every once in a while I'll hit a decent shot and wonder why in the world I only do that three or four times a round. But that's a heck of a lot better than going out there and having no glimmer of anything whatsoever and shelving my clubs.

----

Big thanks to Matt for his help. That's what makes a great analyst -- you don't have to understand all the technical stuff about playing on the line, but if you've played golf or changed a set of spark plugs, he's got you covered.

Along these same lines, I also have a story in today's Telegraph on Georgia's problems with its running game and a whole bunch of additional quotes from the folks involved on what needs to change to get the ground game going.

Monday, September 21, 2009

UGA Inducts Four Into Circle of Honor

Big congrats to Matt Stinchcomb, who is an official Bulldogs Blog hall-of-famer already, but very deserving of this honor.

From the UGA release...

Former Georgia All-Americans Kim Arnold (gymnastics), Bernadette Locke (basketball), Brent Noon (track and field) and Matt Stinchcomb (football) will be inducted into the University of Georgia’s Circle of Honor – the school’s highest tribute paid to former athletes and coaches – this week. The quartet will be honored at an induction banquet on Friday at the Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall, where they will be permanently enshrined in the Circle of Honor exhibit. They also will be recognized at the Georgia-Arizona football game on Saturday.

The all-sports recognition program is designed to recognize and pay tribute to extraordinary student-athletes and coaches who by their performance and conduct have brought honor to the university and themselves, and who by their actions have contributed to the tradition of the Georgia Bulldogs. The criteria also stipulate that each recipient has earned his or her academic degree.

Kim Arnold Arenas

Arnold was the NCAA all-around champion and Honda Award winner as the nation’s top gymnast in 1997 and 1998. She won the 1998 NCAA balance beam title and helped lead Georgia to the national championship that season. Arnold was a 12-time All-American, was the 1998 Southeastern Conference Gymnast of the Year and was a member of three SEC championship teams. She was a two-time Presidential Scholar and was named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll.

Bernadette Locke Mattox

Bernadette Locke followed Coach Andy Landers from Roane State Community College to become Georgia’s first female All-American and Academic All-American. Locke later was a graduate assistant and academic counselor for the Lady Bulldogs before joining Landers’ staff as an assistant coach from 1985-90. She made national headlines when she departed Georgia to become the first female assistant coach for a Division I men’s basketball program at Kentucky. She later served as Kentucky’s Senior Woman Administrator and then as head women’s basketball coach. Locke has spent the past seven seasons as an assistant coach with the WNBA’s Connecticut Sun.

Brent Noon

Brent Noon is the only male student-athlete in Georgia history to capture three individual NCAA championships in the same event. He claimed the shot put titles in 1992, 1993 and 1994. In 1993 and 1994, Noon added six All-America certificates and five SEC titles. Noon set new school records in both the indoor record books of 66 feet, 3 inches and outdoor record books of 70 feet, 51⁄4 inches, both of which still stand today. Noon finished his career with four top-8 efforts at the USA Outdoor Championships and he placed fifth at the 1995 World Outdoor Championships.

Matt Stinchcomb

A three-year starter at offensive tackle, Matt Stinchcomb was a consensus First-Team All-America selection in both 1997 and 1998. He was the recipient of the 1998 Jacobs Blocking Trophy as the top blocker in the SEC and was a finalist for the Lombardi Award, which goes annually to the nation’s top lineman. He was a two-time First-Team Academic All-America selection and in 1998 was named the nation’s Academic All-American of the Year. He received the Woody Hayes National Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award and was named to the American Football Coaches Good Works Team in both 1997 and 1998. Stinchcomb was a first-round draft pick of Oakland in 1999 and he played for the Raiders and Tampa Bay during his NFL career.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Stinchcomb Preps for New Role with SEC Network

ESPN was all over the place at SEC Media Days last week, which shouldn't be surprising given the landmark deal the network signed with the conference this year. The upside for me? It gave me a chance to chat with former Georgia lineman Matt Stinchcomb, who will be handling color analysis for the SEC's new studio show on the SEC Network. Here's what Stinchcomb had to say about his new gig...

David Hale: Are you excited about the new job? I know a lot of Georgia fans are happy to have a local guy doing analysis of the SEC.

Matt Stinchcomb: A meathead? A meathead they'll all know and recognize? No, that'd be someone else. Yeah, I'm fired up. It's just another opportunity to talk shop. To get to do that all day on a Saturday and not actually have to go hide in the garage or something to get away with it -- that's not a bad scenario really.

DH: Well, I think ESPN and the SEC are both pretty excited about the scenario, too. Have you given much thought to what it will be like working for a network like ESPN with such a huge reach nationally?

MS: There will be plenty of voices other than mine, but it's exciting. Growing up where I did, we're Tucker, Georgia guys, growing up in the heart of SEC country. You grow up a Georgia fan, you grow up surrounded by this kind of football, to be able to do that after you're done playing, to have a good excuse to follow it other than just because you want to kill a Saturday, that's ideal. It's just a tremendous opportunity. It's a landmark deal that ESPN and the SEC entered into, and it just shows that this conference has legs outside of the geographic area that it exists. This has an impact on the national landscape. So to be a part of that and have input on how that's communicated to sports fans, that's going to be a lot of fun.

DH: As a guy with such close ties to Georgia, I assume it will be hard to hide your allegiances on the air. How will you be giving an unbiased opinion about, oh, say, the Florida Gators?

MS: An unbiased opinion? Well, they know where you played your college ball, so it's not hard to figure out. But it's not difficult to be an objective observer. I think as long as what you're looking at, the observations are fair, it's hard to really argue with it. At the end of the day, it's always going to just be your opinion, but I think there's ways to communicate that where it's respectful. I grew up a Georgia fan and I follow Georgia now. I've got a lot of family there. But that being said, you can look at the SEC and analyze a football game and it is what it is. Football's still football and you ignore what decal is on the side of the helmet. As long as you're fair to everybody, I think it will be an easy thing to do.

DH: As you're looking ahead to what's to come this season, as a broadcaster, what games are you most looking forward to?

MS: There's plenty of them. Florida-LSU, Georgia-LSU, the Oklahoma State game will be fun. Alabama-Virginia Tech to start the season is going to be an interesting game to watch. Right there, you see one of the top two teams in the SEC East in Georgia playing Oklahoma State, that is by some accounts a top-10 team and one of the best in the Big 12 having to go to Stillwater. Then you have Alabama playing Virginia Tech, another top-10 team out of the ACC. That's a heck of a way to kick off your opening game for two of the top teams in this conference. So those are two of the games you look to almost immediately. Down the line, in the SEC West, pick one. The fact that you have Ole Miss, Alabama and LSU in the conversation, and then you have Arkansas just waiting to spoil one of their seasons, there's too many to really pigeonhole. You can talk about that whole mix. All those teams are going to mesh, and it'll be interesting to see who survives it. That's going to be a murderer's row this year, the SEC West.

DH: Were you at Media Days when you were at Georgia?

MS: As a player I came.

DH: So how does being back here this time compare?

MS: I'm doing a lot more interviews this time. The SEC was big then, but it's a lot bigger now. Part of that is the BCS and the media deals and how successful this conference has been in the bowl season and on a national scale in the bowl championship games. There's a lot of attention on these three days, and rightfully so. This conference impacts what it looks like in December and January.

DH: So with all that's in store for you when the season starts, how are you preparing for the new job? Have you been studying up? Get a haircut?

MS: How does my hair look?

DH: I think it looks great.

MS: I appreciate that. I've worked hard on the weave and tweezed the eyebrows more than once.

Seriously, as much as a lot of people, including myself, follow SEC football, it's not going to be that different. You kind of have to distill some of your thoughts. You can't get up there and do what I'm doing right now and talk and talk and talk. You have to be more concise. But the subject matter, it's great subject matter. It's really compelling stuff that I would follow anyway, so I don't know that it's going to be that much different. I read all the magazines and visit all the sites whether I'm going to be on television or not.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

ESPN, SEC Announce New SEC Network

From SEC release...

ESPN Regional Television, the new over-the-air syndication home for Southeastern Conference programming, and the SEC announced today a regionally syndicated college sports package that will air in more than 73 television markets, along with the branding of the syndication package as the SEC Network – all part of the groundbreaking 15-year agreement between ESPN, Inc., and the SEC.

Within the nine-state SEC footprint, the SEC Network will be delivered in markets by the local over-the-air carrier of SEC events. In markets outside the SEC footprint, the syndicated programming will air on either local, over-the-air television stations or regional sports cable networks.

Coverage will feature extensive football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball telecasts, produced by ESPN Regional Television.

“As ESPN moves forward in this landmark agreement with the SEC, ESPN Regional Television is thrilled to provide our viewers with a consistent window for Southeastern Conference football and basketball,” said Pete Derzis, senior vice president & general manager, ESPN Regional Television. “With ESPN’s multimedia platforms, we anticipate SEC sports will touch an unprecedented base of college fans nationwide.”

The SEC Network will feature an SEC football Game of the Week regionally for 13 consecutive Saturdays, beginning Sept. 5. Those telecasts will kick off at noon ET/11 a.m. CT with the live SEC Studio show, followed by the matchup, generally determined 12 to six days in advance. The new kickoff time for the Game of the Week will be 12:21 p.m. ET.

Longtime SEC announcer Dave Neal will call the weekly SEC Network game on Saturdays, along with analyst Andre Ware and reporter Cara Capuano.

The SEC Studio show is produced by ESPN Regional Television at their headquarters in Charlotte, N.C., also the home of ESPNU. The SEC show will kick off Saturday coverage with host Rob Stone and analyst Matt Stinchcomb in the studio.

The regular-season SEC men’s basketball package on the SEC Network beginning in January will consist of Wednesday and Saturday games, including doubleheaders. The SEC Network will also offer regional coverage of multiple rounds from the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament as well as SEC women’s basketball games on Sundays, also beginning in January.

Two notes from me...

-- I'm thrilled to see Matt Stinchcomb attached to this. He'll be fantastic, as you can probably tell from the "Catching Up With..." feature he did with me last year.

-- Here's the info for the markets in Georgia that will carry the programming:

Albany, WALB (NBC)
Atlanta, WPCH (IND)
Augusta, WRDW; My 12 (CBS; MNT)
Columbus, WXTX; WTVM, WLGA (FOX; ABC; IND)
Macon, WGXA (FOX)
Savannah, WTGS (FOX)