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Here’s the detail on the Hart-Loyola game.
QB Lyons suffered a concussion last week and sat out as did starting MLB Larrimore.
Hart took the opening kickoff, got an 11-yard return from James Wheeler and started
at the 23. The first play from scrimmage was – as one of the ESPN announcers often
says – some “trickeration” (known in the rest of the English-speaking world as “trickery”):
Pettee started out under center and following a double hand off, threw a long cross-field
pass to Yudin for 24 yards. Nice start! But things slowed down after that: 4-yard run by Howell, pass to Casselberry for 2, an incomplete (was there a PI on Yudin?)
and then a shanked punt with no return.
Loyola started at the Cubs 35: pass for 11, illegal procedure penalty (penalties
dogged Loyola all night), a run by Peppars, another run, largely nullified by a
hold which moved the ball back 8 yards from the previous LOS, a pass for 5 then
a long pass down the field which was intercepted by Yudin who returned it about
40 yards but then was stripped of the ball. In sum, Loyola got the ball back at
it’s own 23 but with a first down: QB run (flushed) for 2, pass for -1, incomplete
and a punt which took a very bad bounce for Loyola (or a great bounce for Hart!).
Hart started at the Loyola 41 and immediately got nailed for an illegal procedure
(Note to receivers: put the gloves on quicker; I have no doubt the play called was
a run since Yudin was putting gloves on after
the QB had started his count); pass to Casselberry for 3, pass to Wheeler for 11,
run by Howell for 2, run by Pettee for no gain (flushed) then an interception on
a pass deep down the center (I watched the play on TV after I got home and the TV
confirmed my thoughts from the game; should have been called a PI or hold on the
guy on Yudin).
Loyola started at the 43: run by Peppars for 30, run by Peppars for 2, then a 25-yard
pass to Lawrence for a touchdown.
Loyola 7-0 at 2:07 in the first quarter.
Hart got a 25-yard return by Wheeler and started at the 31: run by Howell
for 7, incomplete, pass to Casselberry for 7, run on pitch to Howell for 7, incomplete;
pass to Yudin for 21 [END OF QUARTER], incomplete, penalty for holding (on a very
nice screen), pass to Yudin for 12, run by Pettee for 4 (sneak) run by Pettee for
1 then pass to Casselberry for 13 and a touchdown. (Casselberry got leveled after
he was well into the endzone. Was this another “futbol” moment where the defender
mistook one of those stupid yellow lines for the goal line?)
7-7 at 10:03.
Weinstein, the Hart kicker put it into the endzone and Loyola started at the20:
run by Peppars for 4, run by Lawrence for 2, pass to Lawrence for 5, run by Peppars
fo 5, run on a reverse by Lawrence for 21, run by Peppars for 1, run by Peppars
for -2, pass for 1 and punt.
Hart got a short return by Wheeler and started at the 14: incomplete, pass to Casselberry
for 2, penalty - pass interference, run by Howell for 0, pass to Embree for 3, pass
to Wheeler for 11, pass to Embree for 8, pass to Wheeler for 0, pass to Yudin for
16 (the DB tried to get the pick and got burned instead), pass to Casselberry for
5, SACK (the only one of the night and a “coverage” sack to boot) for -7, pass to
Yudin for 35 yards and the touchdown.
Hart 14-7 at :58 in the second quarter.
Loyola started at the 20 again, ran the ball for five yards, twice by Peppars before
the half ended.
Pettee started out a little weak but finished splendidly, going 8 for 9 in the
last series including 8 straight completions. He finished the half at 16 of 22,
176 yards, 2 TDs and 1 INT. Howell had 20 yards on 5 carries and Pettee had -2 on
three carries.
Loyola’s QB was 6 for 8, 44 yards, 1 TD and 1INT. Loyola rushed for 77 yards on
12 carries.
Loyola got a bit of a break to start the second half when the kickoff went
out of bounds. Loyola started at the 35: run by Peppars for 6, pass for 2, run by
Peppars for 12, run by the QB on a naked bootleg for 9 then an INT on a pass tipped
by Wheeler and intercepted by Reyes.
Hart started at the 12. Loyola jumped offsides which moved the ball up 5. On a pitch,
Howell lost 4 and then Hart got hit for a delay, incomplete, pass to Wheeler for 4.
The Hart coverage was poor and Lawrence took advantage of it and returned the ball
to the 17 (a net 5 on the punt!). Run by Peppars for 4, run by Peppars for 7, run
by Peppars for -4, pass to Joseph for 10.
14-14 at 6:21 in the third.
Hart got another very nice return by Wheeler out to the 46. Run by Howell
for 1 (apparently he tweaked an ankle and went out of the game at this point); incomplete
to Yudin (pretty clearly pass interference from my point of view but not the refs);
pass on to Yudin for 20 on a drag across the middle; pass interference (close call-
makeup call?); run for 11 by Pettee on a great fake – everyone was after Casselberry
– run by Casselberry for 8 and the touchdown.
Hart 21-14 at 4:10 in the third quarter.
Loyola once again started on the 20: run for 10 (? Peppars out?), run for
4 (?), incomplete, pass for 1 and punt with another very good Hart bounce.
Hart started at the Hart 48: pass to Wheeler for 1, pass to Howell for 1, incomplete
and punt. This could have been a game-changing play. The snap was low, the punter
managed to get to it quickly and started to pick it up but then bobbled it away.
He chased after it and then just kicked it off the ground (another futbol moment?).
It got back close to the line of scrimmage.
Loyola took over on the Hart 45. First play: the first and I think only Loyola play
from the shotgun and an empty backfield.. The snap went over the QB’s head. He ran
it down at the Loyola 37 for a 18-yard loss [for those who keep statistics, this
counts as a “team” rush not chargeable to the QB’s rushing stats per the NCAA statistics
manual]. There ended the third quarter. On the next play, the QB threw an incomplete
and was drilled. Third down was a draw for -1 by Peppars, then a punt.
Hart started at the Hart 35: pass to Embree for 11, run by Casselberry for 40. A
facemask penalty on the next play on the QB (which would have been a sack) put the
ball on the 7: run by Casselberry for 2, run by Casselberry on a pitch for 5 and
the touchdown.
Hart 28-14 at 9:45.
Loyola once again started on the 20 and it was at this point Hart went
into a prevent defense, not using the 3-man rush as we saw in the Birmingham game
and earlier in this game but, rather lining up 3-linemen but then dropping the nose
guard back into coverage. It didn’t work well.
Loyola: penalty for illegal procedure; QB run (flush) for 10, run by Peppars for
2, pass for 15, run by Peppars for -2, pass for 23, pass for 5, pass for 9, run
(Peppars?) for 2, pass for 6, run (by Peppars?) for o and then pass for 3 and the
TD on fourth down.
The PAT was blocked and it was 28-20 Hart at 5:05.
Hart put out the “hands” team but Loyola with 5 minutes and 2 timeouts remaining kicked away. Howell got a 20-yard return to the 21.
Hart: Penalty for pass interference move the ball out to the 36 (this the call that
got the Loyola folks in a lather as it was very close and occurred on their side
of the field and a very questionable throw by Hart into double coverage); incomplete,
run by Howell for 39, run by Casselberry for 13, run by Howell for 6, penalty for
holding, run by Pettee for -2 (not a sack), pass to Casselberry for 20.
The PAT missed and it was Hart 34-20 with 2:30 to play.
Loyola started again from the 20 and Hart once again went into the prevent
defense: offsetting penalties (Hart, hold; Loyola, illegal receiver) and things
started anew at the 20: pass for 20, pass for 14, incomplete, QB run (flush) for
16 and pass long down the right sideline for 30 yards and a touchdown.
Hart 34-27 with 1:30 to go.
Everyone in the place knew what would happen on the kickoff but somehow,
the Hart “hands” team was caught completely off guard on kickoff that Loyola had
faked every prior kickoff. Loyola recovered the onside kick at the Hart 48.
Loyola: incomplete, pass for 20, incomplete and then, on a “wrap around” draw, Loyola
fumbled and Otton recovered for Hart. Two knees later it was over.
Comments: The fourth quarter was really a reversal of Hart strengths. Up to
that point, the defense has been very stout. Loyola’s QB, while throwing for a very
high percentage got very little yardage in the first three quarters. Through the
first three quarters (including the series that ended a few seconds into the fourth
quarter), he was 9 of 14 for 59 yards [6.6 yards a catch], 2 TDs and 2 INTs, not
exactly overwhelming numbers.
Both of Loyola’s scores in the fist 3 quarters came
on a short or relatively short field, following an INT and a long punt return.
In the fourth quarter, the Loyola QB was 10 of 13, 153 yards [15.3 yards a catch]
and 2 TDs. This huge upsurge coincided exactly with the Hart change to a “prevent”
defense. Most all the damage was done down the middle of the field. He got almost
3 times as much yardage in those 9 minutes as he got in the previous 37. He finished
at 19 of 27 for 212 yards, 4 TDs and 2 INTs, a very good night. Loyola’s running
by the running backs in the second half was not too effective: 38 yards on 12 carries.
The QB had 35 yards on 3 carries, each time after he was flushed. The 18-yard loss
on the bad snap moderates the rushing yards even further.
While the Hart defense went into a non-preventative prevent defense, the offense,
contrary to its pattern in earlier games (most notably Moorpark) went right after
Loyola in the fourth quarter – no “prevent offense” for Hart tonight. The Hart offensive
line and running backs simply took over the game. In the fourth quarter, Hart rushed
the ball 7 times for 103 yards and a TD (a 14-yard average). Loyola usually has
the toughest line play that Hart faces. In this case, Hart dominated. Hart passing
was terrific in the first half. The second half stats were far more modest. Pettee
was 6-10 for 57 yards and a TD, though, admittedly, with the great running game
Hart had going, he didn’t need to pass much.
Overall, Hart had 121 yards rushing on 11 carries in the second half.
I have been very critical of the shotgun, as run by Hart, as being a very ineffective
running formation. But I have always thrown in a qualifier: it doesn’t work against
teams with a quick line and particularly, quick linebackers. First, Hart’s linemen,
really for the first time this year, appeared to really be going after people. Normally,
the blocking schemes are fairly passive, fending people off from the QB as opposed
to attacking. More of the plays had run blocking in mind. Second, the O-line appeared,
as a group, bigger and faster than the Loyola guys (I don’t recall that being the
case ever in the past). And the Loyola linebackers, while very good, were not hyper-quick
like the St. Bonaventure bunch (which had trouble with Hart until Hart got down
to the 4th string running back). By the fourth quarter, it looked like the Hart
guys had simply worn down the Loyola linemen and Casselberry and Howell went wild.
My point: with these factors in Hart’s favor, running from the shotgun can work.
However, there are other teams that do have sufficient quickness in the linemen
and backers to neutralize the things that went well on Friday – but not if the lineman
remain this agressive.
The kicking game has been a strong point the prior two weeks but things were a little
out of kilter against Loyola (but Loyola seems to do that to a lot of teams’ kicking
games).
Another oddity here: Hart got three turnovers (two INTs and a fumble) but did not
score on any of them (though there was no attempt to do so on the last fumble).
On Hart's four big errors (fumble [after an int by Yudin], INT, botched punt and
botched return, Loyola was able to capitalize twice.
Through five games, Hart has looked tremendous – at times – in all phases of the
game.
The defense was stifling against Moorpark and Westlake, and very very solid all
but a couple of plays against Birmingham. Loyola did very little through the first
three quarters except when the Cubs had a short field. Even in the loss against
Birmingham, the defense from scrimmage did well forcing five punts. It was the short
field from turnovers and a long return that turned things against Hart with St Bonnie
and which gave Loyola half it's points.
That prevent defense needs some work.
Special teams on the return side have generally been very very good and the kicking
(kickoffs and punts) has been good most of the time. However, I'll wager there will
be some serious work on preventing the onside kick this week.
The special teams on the kicking side have been erratic. Weinstein has put most
of his kicks in the endzone but his teammates have, given up long returns that have
been (St Bonnie) or could have been (Loyola) fatal.
On offense, Hart has been able to drive the ball, fairly consistently, the length
of the field against every opponent, most noticeably against both St. B and Loyoal.
The runs after catch and the precision in the routes are very noticeably improved
factors in the last three games.
Pettee, as a backup has done very well. His receivers and line are a very big part
of that success. I loved the fourth quarter offensive play-calling this game: playing
to win, not playing to not lose. There still is a fair amount of predictability
in the play-calling but the execution was at a higher level and well run plays,
especially when the talent is equal or superior, will beat just about anything the
defense can do.
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10/01 Birmingham
09/23
Westlake
09/16St. Bonaventure
09/09
Moorpark
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