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Postmortem: Matt Barkley vs. the Sophomore Slump

December 8th, 2010 by


A season in review. Today: Matt Barkley’s second season at the helm at USC.

The Expectation. Barkley had a weird freshman year in 2009: From mega-hyped recruit to surprise starter to toast of the punditocracy after leading USC’s offense on the game-winning drive at Ohio State in his second start to absurdly premature Heisman candidate after a 380-yard barrage at Notre Dame – and then back to being just another overwhelmed freshman quarterback as the Trojan offense bit the dust down the stretch, finishing with fewer yards and points per game than any USC offense since Pete Carroll’s first season in 2001.

By any prevailing standard outside of the demanding USC hype machine, though, Barkley turned in a solid debut that put him squarely on the track to fulfilling the golden boy projections laid out for him. With Barkley’s maturity, a stable of deep threats in senior Robert Johnson and a trio of celebrated newcomers and a new play caller (incoming head coach Lane Kiffin) in place of the unlamented Jeremy Bates, both the offense and Barkley’s personal Q rating had plenty of room for some fairly explosive growth.

The Reality. Again, Barkley came out of the gates firing: Through the first seven games, he’d passed for multiple scores in six of them, with 20 touchdowns to four interceptions overall and seemingly a firm grip on the offense. The Trojans rolled to a 4-0 September, and the put the pedal down in back-to-back, high-scoring losses to Washington and Stanford in early October, despite producing 30 points and nearly 500 yards of total offense in both. Barkley personally went off for 390 yards and three touchdowns with no turnovers in a losing effort against the Cardinal, and bounced back the following week to bury Cal beneath five touchdown passes and a 42-0 halftime deficit en route to a 48-14 rout heading into the Oct. 23 bye week.

At that point, USC was 5-2, averaging 494 yards and 37 points per game (both top-15 numbers nationally) and Barkley was the highest-rated passer in the Pac-10. On the other side of the break, everything hit the fan.

Barkley turned in easily his worst game on the biggest stage on Oct. 30, serving up two interceptions and botching a shotgun snap (with some help from Kiffin) that helped turned the tide in an eventual 53-32 beatdown at the hands of Oregon. It also seemed to turn the tide in Barkley’s season: Beginning with the loss to the Ducks, his last five starts included six touchdowns to eight interceptions – twice as many as he threw over the first seven games – and zero 300-yard efforts. From Oct. 2 to Nov. 27, USC dropped five of eight games, with two of the three wins coming by one point (34-33 over Arizona State) and three points (24-21 over Arizona), respectively. Before he was knocked out of the Nov. 20 loss at Oregon State with a bad ankle, Barkley had already thrown a pick-six and was battling through the most nightmarish first half of his career in a humiliating, 36-7 flop in Corvallis. He didn’t play at all the following Saturday against Notre Dame, another Trojan loss in a driving rainstorm.

Barkley was back but clearly below 100 percent in last Saturday’s 28-14 win over UCLA, throwing two more interceptions in an ugly triumph that left the offense averaging a full 60 yards and six points less per game for the season than it was averaging at the bye week.


Positive Spin. On paper, the offense significantly improved compared to 2009, and Barkley continued to show flashes of the pocket presence, downfield arm strength and knack for fitting the ball into tight windows that made him such a scout favorite in the first place. He also established a good rapport with true freshman burner Robert Woods, the team’s leading receiver, and left no doubt that the offense is built primarily around his right arm.

Negative Spin. The Favre-like tendency to strong-arm balls into coverage led to another season of double-digit picks, and contributed to another season of diminishing returns down the stretch. The Trojans were just 3-3 in their last six games for the second year in a row – also failing, for the second year in a row, to crack 30 points in any of the last four. Even within the Pac-10, Barkley was squarely in the middle of the pack by every significant measure.

The Takeaway. There was some progress in the first season under Kiffin’s watch, even if it wound up being of the "two steps forward, one step back" variety. But Year Three is where the rubber meets the road: For other recently hyped pocket slingers like Jimmy Clausen, Mark Sanchez, Matt Stafford, Matt Ryan and Brady Quinn, their junior year was the year the simmering potential gelled into a big season that propelled them into the first round of the draft.

Barkley was arguably ahead of everyone in that group as a sophomore. We still only got glimpses this year (see the brilliant efforts against Stanford and Cal), but if USC is going keep its head above water throughout the depths of the sanctions era, it will have to be by Barkley continuing to shed the "potential" label and becoming the best player on the field. He’s still on schedule.

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Previous 2010 Postmortems: Texas’ offense. … Georgia’s defense. … The demise of Randy Shannon.
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Postmortem: Georgia’s revamped defense runs in place

December 2nd, 2010 by


A season in review. Today: Georgia’s defensive overhaul.

The Expectation. Token scapegoat Willie Martinez was out after a disappointing 8-5 finish in 2009, the fourth consecutive season since Martinez was promoted to defensive coordinator in 2005 that his defense had allowed more points per game than the previous season. Veteran NFL hand Todd Grantham was in.

As with all new coordinators, Grantham’s arrival inevitably signaled a "more aggressive" approach than UGA got from Martinez, who – like almost all outgoing coordinators – had frankly become a little too contemplative for their tastes. Grantham was one of the coaches driving the rejuvenated 3-4 bandwagon, and spent the spring totally revamping the Bulldog D in the image of the scheme he taught as the Dallas Cowboys’ defensive line coach.

The Reality. SEC sack leader Justin Houston notwithstanding, there’s no evidence of any significant rise in pressure in the transition from Martinez to Grantham – sacks and quarterback hurries were actually slightly down, and tackles for loss nearly identical. In fact, it was all nearly identical: In terms of the big-picture measures – points per game, yards per game and yards per play – the swing from 2009 to 2010 was less than 11 percent in every category, which held across the board even after filtering out non-conference games and seven games against non-winning teams (based on final record). Five of the ‘Dogs’ six losses came in games in which they yielded at least 24 points, in all but one of which they also scored 24 points.

Positive Spin. The most obvious turnaround came in the form of turnovers: The Bulldogs went from a pitiful 12 takeaways in ’09 – including a national-low two fumble recoveries – to 24 this fall, coming up with ten loose balls. The improved greed paid dividends with four defensive touchdowns, compared to just one in 2009, although it must be noted that three of those came against Louisiana-Lafayette and Idaho State, whose outmanned quarterbacks also accounted for six of Georgia’s 14 interceptions.


Back in the big picture, seven of the first eight opponents (all except Colorado) were held below their season averages in both yards and points.

Negative Spin. The Bulldogs’ three biggest rivals all went over their season averages on the scoreboard down the stretch, and they all did it largely on the ground: Florida piled up 231 rushing, Auburn 315 and Georgia Tech a staggering 411 from the triple option last Saturday in a 42-34 shootout that saved UGA – at least temporarily – from a losing season. Earlier in the year, the ‘Dogs were also pounded into submission by South Carolina freshman Marcus Lattimore in his first SEC start, and went on to give up 179 and 235 yards on the ground, respectively, to Mississippi State and Colorado in back-to-back losses that nearly brought the roof down on head coach Mark Richt.

The secondary came in for an early shreddin’ of its own at the hands of Ryan Mallett, who turned in a leisurely 380-yard, three-touchdown afternoon capped by a game-winning touchdown pass to Greg Childs from 40 yards out in the final minute. Kentucky’s Mike Hartline hung 353 yards and four touchdowns on the UGA secondary a month later, in another shootout Georgia win.

The Takeaway. Well, opponents’ points per game went down for the first time in five years, even if only slightly. But considering that the offense also averaged nearly a touchdown more per game over ’09 with a vastly improved turnover margin and both the overall and SEC records got worse, it’s impossible to paint the campaign as a step forward. In fact, given the borderline collapses against three major rivals in the final month, it looks more like the train is beginning to roll back down the hill.

At best, 2010 was a sideways step from the season that got Martinez fired, and with one more loss, Richt might have been right behind him. Justin Houston is a cornerstone, an elite athlete who can change opponents’ game plans. But he’s most likely on his way to the NFL in a month, along with leading tackler Akeem Dent, a senior. It looks like Richt is going to survive for 11th year at the helm. But for the sake of a truly make-or-break 2011, this team can really, really use the extra practices ahead of the bowl game.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports