
Mark Dantonio Weekly Press Conference Coverage
9/29/2009 12:00:00 AM | Football
Sept. 29, 2009
Coverage: Video | Podcast |
Player Interviews
MARK DANTONIO WEEKLY PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
COACH DANTONIO: Good afternoon. After our last game against Wisconsin, we talked about that a little bit on Sunday evening, but I think you can take a couple different approaches. You can take one of disappointment certainly, at 1-3 right now, not probably where we were expecting to be at this point in time. You can take a look at it and be very encouraged in the fact that we've lost some close games. And then you can also look at it and choose to succeed, and I think to do that we have to focus on the present and the task at hand, which is Michigan.
As far as where we're at as a football team right now, things have been very, very positive in coming back to practice on Sunday night after a disappointing loss. We had a good practice, with guys flying around because they're excited about the entire week.
It's a state rivalry. It's pretty well documented this state is drawn in either green or blue pretty much, so there's a lot of people involved in this rivalry, and I think it's exciting for everybody who has played in this series.
In regards to Michigan, they're playing very well right now. They've won two very close games. The quarterback (Tate Forcier) has made plays in both games down the stretch to win - both the Notre Dame and the Indiana game, and he should be complimented on that.
They've got big playmakers on the offensive side of the ball. (Denard) Robinson comes in (at quarterback) and does a very nice job, as well. He's a very exciting player. Carlos Brown has been very productive (at running back), and Brandon Minor looks like he's got his game going. They've got some outstanding skill receivers in (Greg) Mathews and (Martavious) Odoms. So offensively, they're operating on all gears.
On the defensive side of the ball, Greg Robinson is the new defensive coordinator. He's is the third coordinator they've had in three years going back to Coach (Lloyd) Carr's time, so with that comes probably a little bit of a learning curve, but they've got some very good players over there. (Obi) Ezeh is an outstanding linebacker. Certainly (defensive end) Brandon Graham is a guy that shows out every week, and then in the secondary (Donovan) Warren is a very good football player back there.
The specialists seem to be playing very well, and they play very hard on special teams. I think it's also very, very important to recognize that Coach (Rich) Rodriguez has done an outstanding job here in the past year and a half. He's got it turned. They're playing very, very well, and he needs to be complimented for that.
With that, I'll take some questions, and we'll take it from there.
Q. How far does this game go as Michigan State is trying to establish itself as the top university in this state, and what does this game mean with that overall?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, I think this game obviously, I don't know if it's bragging rights or whatever it is, but throughout the entire state, it's sort of you either win it or lose it. As I said last week, you're either going to walk the streets or walk the alleys. Based on what I said there, it's a year to year thing. It'll always be like that. I don't think that anybody is going to say, well, because we won last year, that means that you're going to win the next year.
But it's a game that we'll always focus on here and make it extremely important. I don't know if I'm answering your question, though.
Q. How important is it, though, to keep winning the game to establish dominance in the rivalry?
COACH DANTONIO: I think it's very important.
Q. This program hasn't beaten Michigan two years in a row in 42 years. What does that mean if you can get that kind of monkey off your back, and would it mean something more to the rivalry and make it more meaningful to put that past aside?
COACH DANTONIO: We try and focus on present. When I came back here, I think we had a chance to win in 2007 right out here. We were up by 10, seven minutes to go, so we had an opportunity to win there. Last year, we won, so we'll deal with what happens now.
But I wasn't here 42 years ago, I was here in 1995. I know this is a very important game, and I try and deal with the present right now.
And as far as what does it mean, it's a critical game for us. It always will be, regardless of our record. I'm not going to try and sidestep that issue.
Q. With the way the defenses have been playing, do you expect it to be a shootout?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, that's a good question. Hopefully not, but they're certainly very talented. They've made some big plays. They have big play potential, and I think our offense has done some nice things, as well.
Q. Defensively, after watching film and analyzing it, what do you need to do differently or hope to do differently?
COACH DANTONIO: What we have to do is make plays on the deep ball and when we have an opportunity to tackle in space, we need to do so. And it comes down to that, we've got to make tackles. We've got to play with a little bit more confidence. Structurally, we have to shore up certain things that are done that when you say why did that happen, was it structure or was it physical or was it a mental assignment, and from a structural standpoint we need to work there, too.
So it's a total team thing. I'm not up here to say this guy did wrong or this coach did wrong, to try and get to where we're at. But the other teams have players on scholarships, too, and at some point they've made plays, as well. So you have to compliment the other people that we've played against, too.
Q. It's one thing when young players maybe struggle, but when you see guys who aren't performing at the level that they have in the past, is that a confidence issue? How do you decipher that?
COACH DANTONIO: You go back to basics and you try and reaffirm their confidence. But I think that when you have positive energy on a football field, things just sort of go in that direction. If you have negative energy out there, if you're standing around waiting for a play to be made and you don't make that play, then chances are things start to happen to you.
Now, with that being said, you play different offenses every single week, so you have to be able to change gears just like this week. This is definitely a different offense than we played against Wisconsin, so you have to be able to adjust, change gears. There are new things that you have to go back and say, okay, remember when we did this or we're going to do this at this point in time with this type of team. So there are some things like that in terms of mental assignments that we have to be on.
But really, when you say confidence, whether you say positive energy or excitement, we have to capture that, and I'm very confident that we will.
Q. Do you think you're getting to the point where you need to go with one quarterback to help your offense and let that guy get into a rhythm and stay in a rhythm?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, I think our quarterbacks have an opportunity to get in rhythm. If you look at the first three games, we gave each quarterback an opportunity to get into rhythm. In the Notre Dame game, a little bit less maybe, but we still had a couple series there to get going when we talk about Keith (Nichol). This past game maybe it wasn't quite as evident, but we still give both guys opportunities, and I don't think that it'll be any different.
But the number one thing to me is who's moving the football team, how are we performing and those types of things. Are we turning the ball over? Is the football team moving, and who gives us the best chance to win? That's what we'll look at as we go through it.
Both guys have been great. They've been extremely mature in the way they've handled things.
Q. You have 10 "or" starters listed on the depth chart. Is that something you'd kind of like to see work itself out to where you have one guy or is the competition something you like to see?
COACH DANTONIO: I think competition is something that we like to see. Guys have game experience; how they play in every single game or as the game continues on, if they're playing well, they're staying in. Sometimes, we just want to play guys to allow them to grow, too. But a lot of our players have game experience, so that should be a positive for us.
A couple guys are nicked up so you see either or at some positions that type of thing and then in other situations, we play them. But you see guys out there playing 30 snaps. So I think it's fair to say that we could start either of them.
Q. Could you talk about the trouble (Tate) Forcier brings with the pass and the run and him bouncing around all over the place and also the fact that he's led them to a couple game winning drives late in the game as a freshman?
COACH DANTONIO: Yeah, he's shown great composure when the game has been on the line, especially for a true freshman. He's definitely a run pass threat. If something is not there, he's got some wiggle room and can get north and run with the ball. There are some designed runs for him, as well. The offense he operates in fits him very, very well, and he's able to do a lot of things with it.
And then you see (Denard) Robinson come in and do a lot of things, as well. He's a very exciting runner, as well. Both those guys should be complimented. They're both true freshmen, and they're doing an outstanding job right now.
Q. There has been a lot of talk about your backfields, both offensively and defensively. How do you assess the play of your front line on offense and defense?
COACH DANTONIO: Our offensive line has performed pretty well. Through the first three games, we've not had as many rushing yards as we would have liked, but we've worked without our center really for almost two and a half games, and when you take your starting center out of there, it's difficult.
John Stipek has done an outstanding job filling in for him. He was a defensive lineman when he came here, so he's made that adjustment. He's worked very hard and is very proficient in terms of no mishandled snaps, and he's been very, very good with assignments.
At the right guard and right tackle, we've gone through some guys. We had J'Michael Deane in there; we had Brendon Moss in there and then we worked with Jared McGaha in there a little bit. We've got D.J. Young in there at right tackle, so we've moved Moss over to guard. So we've been working with different people.
We lost (Joel) Foreman with an ankle injury in the Notre Dame game, so we were without him the last game. He could have played an emergency situation, but we moved (Joel) Nitchman over at left guard (for the Wisconsin game). Ethan Ruhland played left guard at Notre Dame, so we've got some different guys going in there. So many of those guys are interchangeable, but the main thing that you see is you don't see a lot of missed assignments. We need to get better in terms of technique, but you don't see a lot of missed assignments.
And we've got young running backs. A couple times, the running backs could have slid one way or the other and gained additional yards.
From a defensive-front perspective, Jerel Worthy is a red shirt freshman, and the quality of his play has increased greatly from game one. Jerel probably had his best game last week (against Wisconsin). So he's playing steady. (Kevin) Pickelman is a little banged up, and (Oren) Wilson was a little banged up last week. He'll be fully healthy this week. And our defense end play with Trevor Anderson and Colin Neely on the other side has been okay.
We need to provide more pass rush, get off blocks and use our hands better, and apply four man pressure a little bit better. But that's where I would assess it right now.
Q. How critical has Greg Jones been to your defense with what he's able to do?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, he plays around a lot of things; he plays around a lot of people, so he's able to get off blocks. He's very instinctive in terms of how he handles blockers in his face, and he has the ability to get off them and fly to the football. The guy makes 10, 12, 13 tackles a game, so obviously he's very important to our program and our defense.
With that said, he can always improve, whether it's little things schematically or pass coverage or whatever, but I don't think that he is hitting on all cylinders yet. You'll see the best of him to come.
Q. Is that because of the pass coverage?
COACH DANTONIO: No, again, there are a lot of things going on in there schematically relative to who we play game one to game two, three, four, five, six. Sometimes, teams are dramatically different. As I just said, Wisconsin is different than Michigan's offense. So you have to adapt.
He's playing middle linebacker full time for the first time. Last year, he was a SAM linebacker, outside backer; so he's making the adjustment. While he can do that in spring practice and in fall practice against our offense and be right on target, when things start to change on him, there's an adjustment, so sometimes he sees things for the first time. But he's extremely active. He's an outstanding blitzer because gets off blocks.
I think people are turning their protection to him at times. But he's an outstanding player for us, so he's critical to our program.
Q. How would you assess your coverage on punts and kickoffs, and where do you think that is right now?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, our punt coverage has been pretty good. We hit the guy late, got sort of pushed or whatever, but didn't focus on the ball coming down and had a 15 yard penalty running into the punt returner in the Wisconsin game. And other than that, they've had one return on us.
Our kickoff coverage, we've got to get the ball down there deep. We lost (Todd) Boleski, who had the ability to kick it in the end zone. We're getting it down there inside the 5, but we've got to cover it. It's been okay. People have run the ball back to the 40 or so a couple of times. So I haven't been completely pleased with it, but we had a tackle on the 15 last week, plus a couple of them down inside the 20 or so. I think we were clipped on the one that went out to the 41. But there was no call on it, so you deal with it.
As we assess it, I think we have people running down hard and making plays, and I think schematically it's correct.
Q. During big weeks like this, a lot of coaches kind of batten down the hatches a little bit, change how they do things. You're having players come and talk here and everything. Is this a reflection of maybe a more bunker mentality because Michigan is here or because of the record, or what's causing the change?
COACH DANTONIO: It's Michigan week, so you want the focus to be there. I also think that you want your older players pretty much to be spending time with the media. I think that's natural. Right now, we don't need a lot of outside things going on that just confuse the issue. We need to group ourselves together. The people in that room know what's going on in that room in terms of what we're doing, in terms of why there's a problem, and we need to focus on dealing with that problem, and we need to come out completely focused and we need to come out with great team solidarity in everything that we do, which we will. I'm very confident of that.
Q. You were here for the 1999 game and the significance of that, that big win. Given the cast of characters that were involved in that game, everyone from Tom Brady to "Boo Boo" Thompson, what does it mean to you to just kind of see the talent that was on the field then, the significance of the game, and does it mean any more to you now given the paths so many people have taken in that game and just the roles that they've played since?
COACH DANTONIO: Yeah, I remember all the way back to the 1995 game when Derrick Mason made the catch down here and Tony Banks threw the ball to Muhsin Muhammad in the end zone. Both Derrick Mason and Muhsin Muhammad have gone on to have outstanding (pro) careers. I remember the six interceptions out here, as well. I think three of them were by Charles Woodson.
So I remember the 1997 and '98 game. I remember the '98 game, Plaxico Burress going down on the kickoff, we blooped it and he blew up the guy that was getting the ball. It was a very close game at halftime until they scored with 22 seconds to go and then kicked and we fumbled, and then they scored again. You tend to remember it all because you put so much into it.
When you work 85, 90 hours a week preparing for one single moment, you tend to remember those things. This will be no different, just like last year, just like the year before. We'll come ready to play, I can assure you that.
Q. When you say you're not going to sidestep the issue of the importance of this game, you, in fact, did that right out of the gate here with your how long are we going to bow down to Michigan to the reaction to the little brother comment. You by intent made it a point to make Michigan a priority here, didn't you, where you felt it needed to be?
COACH DANTONIO: Absolutely. Is that what you're saying? I'm not going to sidestep the issue.
Q. Can you elaborate on that and why?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, because I feel like every football team needs a rivalry game. Every team needs a rival, every program needs a rival, everybody needs a game - I don't care where you're at, they need a game that is special to their program. They need a game that sets everybody else up. They need a game for their fans that sets everything up. We they need to play for something. I think that's natural. I don't care if I'm at Zanesville High School playing against the Newark Wildcats. I don't care if I was at Cincinnati playing against Louisville, but every program needs a rivalry game. That's just the way I want to always deal with our program. I want our players to be excited about playing in one particular game, and I want them to be focus.
To me because I've been here before, that game was the Michigan game, and I think you can safely say for most people in this state, that's probably the same thing, at least if you're green.
Q. Three takeaways in 282 defensive snaps. What can coaches do about that, and how important is it to do something about it before Saturday?
COACH DANTONIO: Yeah, when you look at the drive chart and how people are getting point A to point B, we've got to get the ball on our side of the 50 on the short field for our offense some, and we've not been able to do that because of turnovers. We've done it a couple times with returns, but we've not done it with turnovers. You work on them, you talk about them, but it's that positive energy I think. When things are rolling, things are rolling. And when there's excitement there, the ball is coming out.
If you're waiting for it to happen, sometimes it doesn't happen. Compliment the teams that we played; they've taken care of the ball. But I don't think there's any doubt that turnovers in the game of football are critical to winning and losing. Just like you saw last week, even though they had some long drives, the game would have been closer had we not turned the ball over. The game would have definitely been closer had we gotten those turnovers.
So even though it's only an eight point game at the end because you play 60 minutes, we sort of faded in the fourth quarter because of a couple turnovers, and I think in the fourth quarter it went from a seven point game all of a sudden to a little more.
Q. Big picture, you guys have made strides in in state recruiting the past couple years. How important is in state recruiting against Michigan and in general?
COACH DANTONIO: I think it speaks more probably to younger players, as you get into your senior year, relationships are already formed. I think people are making decisions earlier, and so there are relationships that are developed earlier. You're heavily recruiting them as juniors, having them onto your campus and building relationships. Some people go look at this player as opposed to this other player based on what you run and what you do defensively and offensively, so there are those different types of things.
But I do think in the hearts of young people, the 9th and 10th graders that are coming, I think that you're battling there even more intently maybe. But that would just be my sense of it.
Q. Johnny Adams of course missed the Notre Dame game, an unfortunate loss. Is he any closer to getting onto the field?
COACH DANTONIO: Yeah, he is. We didn't play him last week because we thought about should we red shirt him, should we not, because we could red shirt him with our situation basically. I felt like Johnny is like a starter for us. He missed the Notre Dame game. We didn't play him last week, so there's still that thought, what are we going to do, are we going to red shirt or not? Last week, we went into the situation saying, we would hold him. I'm not sure that we'll do that this week. I think we'll play him.
Q. Glenn Winston seemed to emerge a little bit more last week. Is he getting to the point where he may be featured more or possibly moving into the starting rotation?
COACH DANTONIO: Well, I guess I would say what Earle Bruce used to say, "You can't starve the horse that pulls the load," which means that if he's running it downhill and running it well, he's going to get the ball.
Q. You talked a little bit about players that made impact in past games. Can you talk about maybe Blair White? Last year, he was that guy, and how his career has taken off really since the Michigan Michigan State game last year.
COACH DANTONIO: Yeah, Blair had an outstanding second half of the season really last year. He really emerged as a great player for us, not just in the Michigan game but prior to that game when B.J. Cunningham and Mark Dell were out a little bit (with injuries), and then Blair White sort of started to become the feature guy. Obviously, he had a great game against Michigan, but he played well in the Wisconsin game, Northwestern game, Indiana game, as well. But he'll certainly be ready to play this week.
It's an important game for all of our players, especially the ones who have played in this game before. They understand what it means. They understand the rivalry. I think it takes a guy with some experience here having been in this game to really understand the meaning of it and all the things that go along with it. So he'll be ready. But I think he's had an outstanding career.
Q. Is there any sense of frustration that a quarterback hasn't emerged from the other one, or do you like how they're so close and pushing each other?
COACH DANTONIO: No, I'm not at all frustrated with either quarterback. I think that as we progress through, if they deserve an opportunity to play based on their performance on the field, they've played. (Kirk) Cousins had a great game against Notre Dame, and he played very well before that. Keith (Nichol) has played well too. He didn't play as much this past game, but then when he came in at the end, he played very well at the end, especially the last six minutes.
Q. You've pushed for physical play on both sides of the ball. Last year's game seemed to be one where you guys won in many ways with blunt-force trauma almost. How comfortable do you feel with that philosophy going into this game despite these recent losses?
COACH DANTONIO: We won't allow the recent losses to affect our performance in this game or our mindset coming into this game. It'll be what it'll be; it'll get done on the field. I think that certainly Michigan comes in here with the same type of mindset, so it ought to be a battle. I feel very confident our players will be ready to play.
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