Fansmanship Podcast Episode 217 – Chris Sylvester and Brint Wahlberg
It’s another podcast episode! Cal Poly basketball teams are at the Big...
In the midst of Cal Poly football’s recent run of losses, I have been as disappointed as any fan. When there seems to be “one thing” to point at, it’s easy to point at that thing really hard, with both pointer fingers, and yell and scream.
I try to give myself a day or two after losses, though, before making broad statements — I get as hot and emotional as anyone and stop thinking logically in the midst of a big game. So, with a few days’ perspective here are some things I learned over the weekend in Cal Poly’s 17-13 loss to Northern Arizona.
“Turning it around” and making the playoffs is something Cal Poly fans still held out hope for prior to Saturday’s game. Reasonably, the Mustangs could win all the rest of their games and not make it to the playoffs. This is a huge disappointment to fans who saw last year’s team and had high hopes for this season
Willie Tucker limping onto the field before the game with a cane wasn’t a good sign.
Things have not gone the Mustangs’ way recently, but let’s analyze what’s happened over the first eight games.
If I had told you that Tim Walsh would name a starting quarterback, have that quarterback, his best receiver, and his best running back be out with injuries, would you have given the Mustangs a chance? What about if they used three starters at quarterback during the season?
If I had told you that, despite all of that missed playing time by the best players, Cal Poly would have come within two special teams blunders of beating a Top-10 Montana team on the road and a top-20 Northern Arizona team at home in back-to-back weeks, with a quarterback who wasn’t even on-campus this time last year, you might have called me crazy. To pull all that off would have been a miracle, and Cal Poly almost did it.
Cal Poly fans hoped that the team had enough depth to rebound from losing Vince Moraga and Willie Tucker, but when Kristaan Ivory was pulled out of Saturday’s game after just one carry, it meant that the three most important skill position players on opening day were out with injuries. Vocal offensive line leader Lefi Letuligasenoa was also held out of the second half on Saturday with a knee injury, adding to the Mustangs’ offensive instability.
While injuries are a part of the game, taking away any offense’s three most important skill position players and best offensive lineman would deal a near-fatal blow to any good FCS team — deep or not.
What it means is that nobody else can make any mistakes. The defense played amazing football on Saturday, but the crack in the armor was the special teams — again. We’ve covered special teams as an area of weakness for Cal Poly over the past few weeks, so I won’t go into it too much, other than to say that when skill-position depth begins to thin out, so does special teams depth.
Again, injuries are part of football, but at some point, they add-up.
Because I’m trying to start my week positively, I figured I’d end with the most positive note about Cal Poly — their defense is really, really good. When teams line up and try to run inside the tackles against them, it’s a rarity that they find any room. The Mustangs’ defensive front-seven held the conference’s leading rusher — Zack Bauman — to less than 100 yards. Despite giving up a few big plays, the defensive backfield also played a great game — notching two interceptions on Saturday.
After stopping Montana on three 4th down plays last week, the dominance of the defense was fully on-display at the end of the third quarter on Saturday, when Northern Arizona turned a first-and-goal opportunity at the one yard line into a missed field goal.
Cal Poly fans should take note of how good this defense is and realize that they are doing some things that are really, really special. Over the past four games (a span where the team has gone 1-3), the Mustangs are giving up only 13.75 points per game. That number includes an overtime touchdown scored by Montana.
While the team isn’t coming out on-top as much as fans would like recently, it’s safe to say that the Mustangs’ defense has found its stride.
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