Showing posts with label Weedeater Bowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weedeater Bowl. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Attendance woes




According to statistics released by the NCAA, Georgia Tech in 2010 posted its lowest average per game attendance since stadium capacity was increased to 55,000 prior to the 2003 season. The 2010 figure of 46,449 ranked 50th among 120 FBS teams. Tech was also 58th nationally in percent of capacity, at 84.45%. It is interesting to note that Tech's 2008 and 2010 seasons under Johnson are two of the three lowest in average attendance since the 2003 expansion.

Georgia Tech football attendance figures since 2003:

2003: 52,862
2004: 46,817
2005: 51,607
2006: 50,617
2007: 50,280
2008: 47,489
2009: 51,584
2010: 46,449

Likewise, Independence Bowl attendance and television ratings were down for the 2010 season. While the 2009 edition of the game attracted 49,653 fans, the 2010 version drew only 39,362, a 21% decrease year-on-year. This despite an aggressive campaign by Georgia Tech to push steeply-discounted $14 tickets to the event.

In fact this year's I-Bowl was the lowest-attended since Mississippi State and Texas A&M met in a blizzard in 2000. If you were to discount that total because of inclement weather, you would need go back to the 1994 game between Virginia and TCU to find an emptier Independence Stadium.

The malaise was neither limited to the fans in-person. The 2010 I-Bowl sputtered to a 1.4 rating with 2.234 million viewers on ESPN2, a 30% and 32% decrease respectively from 2009(2.0, 3.276 mil).

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

It's not like we were losing to Fresno



Paul Johnson football in 2010:

  • Georgia Tech's first losing season since 1996
  • A 6-7 record overall, which in the ACC is essentially a 3-9 record in a real conference
  • 3rd consecutive bowl loss under Johnson
  • 3rd consecutive bowl scoring 7 or less offensive points
  • 2nd consecutive loss to a 5+ loss UGA team
  • 1 win against a team with a winning record(7-5 UNC with most of its playmakers suspended)
  • Other wins over SC State, Wake Forest, Middle Tennessee, Duke, and Virginia
  • Loss to Sagarin #105, 3-9 Kansas(pictured above)
  • Combined conference record of ACC foes beaten, 7-25(.219)
  • 67th in the Sagarin ratings, behind two FCS teams, and only 4 spots ahead of Georgia Southern
  • 99th in red zone scoring percentage
  • 119th passing offense
  • 120th in fumbles lost
  • 3rd to last in players on the postseason All-ACC 1st, 2nd, and 3rd teams, ahead of only Virginia and Wake. Only one of these players is returning next season.
  • Disastrous recruiting class following an ACC championship season


No Comebacks For You

As previously covered, Georgia Tech under Paul Johnson seems to have serious problems in mounting late-game comebacks. Here is the updated chart following the bowl:  

Games under Paul Johnson where GT gained possession of the football inside of 5 minutes remaining while trailing by 8 points or less:

YearOpponentTime leftDeficitResultFinal score
2008Virginia Tech4:373Downs(L) 17-20
--0:253End Gm-
2008Virginia3:297INT(L) 17-24
2009Georgia3:306Downs(L) 24-30
2010Kansas4:223Downs(L) 25-28
2010Wake Forest2:213TD(W) 24-20
2010Virginia Tech2:237INT(L) 21-28
2010Georgia2:531Downs(L) 34-42
--1:228INT-
2010Air Force1:377INT(L) 7-14


Misnomer Myth

Tech's "offensive" performance in Shreveport continued a trend of poor play in the post-season. Paul Johnson insists that this inadequacy in bowl games is a "misnomer" about his offense. You take a look at the stats and be the judge:

SeasonOpponentOff. YardsOff. PointsTurnovers3rd down eff.Final score
2008LSU314333-153-38
2009Iowa155714-1214-24
2010Air Force320748-187-14

Johnson's idea of sportsmanship

Air Force QB Tim Jefferson goes out of his way to greet Coach Johnson after the game, only to be shoved out of the way.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Weed Eater Fest 2010: The Honeymoon is over


At the beginning of the 2010 season, Coach Paul Johnson said this year's team had a chance to be his best yet, but he then qualified that statement with the same trademark cliché he had trotted out prior to the 2009 season:

"We might be a better team, but not win as many games."

Well the 2010 edition of the Yellow Jackets didn't win as many games, and it was most definitely not a better team.

Even the Aussies are catching on



Credit to Nedleeds on the Stingtalk board

Monday, December 27, 2010

Out-geniused


Air Force 14, Georgia Tech 7

During its customary pre-game flight, the Air Force falcon mascot desperately escaped from Independence Stadium, seemingly privy to the stinkfest which was about to ensue.

Special teams miscues, red zone blunders, a late-game meltdown. Basically everything we've come to expect from Paul Johnson football in 2010. The "genius" of option football was out-optioned by a program he used to beat regularly with service academy athletes. Of course who's to say at this point how much of Tech's roster would actually start at Johnson's former school.

I do know one thing. Chan Gailey never lost seven games.

Quick post-game notes:

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Three more players suspended


"We haven't talked about that, but I'm sure (the motivation) is there (...) The motivation of not getting embarrassed should be high on our list.

- Coach Paul Johnson


Starting linebacker Anthony Egbuniwe and reserve defensive backs Michael Peterson and Louis Young have found themselves appended to the ever-expanding roll of players unavailable for Monday afternoon's Poulan Weedwhacker Bowl. Apparently Coach Johnson has so little control over his players that he cannot get them to make curfew in the backwoods of Louisiana three days before a "must-win" bowl game. It appears the suspensions are for the first half of the game only.

Since two of the three, Egbuniwe and Peterson, are Gailey recruits, I'm sure the Kool-Aid slurpers have already devised a scenario whereby the pair treacherously ensnared the lily-white "Johnson-approved" Young into their sordid web of after-hours chicanery.

This ain't Navy, Coach Johnson! When you coach in the big-time, discipline and motivation don't simply take care of themselves! What an embarrassment the last month has been for all who love Georgia Tech.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Johnson losing control of team?



On Thursday four Georgia Tech football players were deemed academically ineligible for Monday's Weedwhacker Bowl in Shreveport. Starting receiver Stephen Hill, starting safety Mario Edwards, reserve linebacker Anthony Barnes, and woman-beating defensive lineman Robert Hall will not be suiting up for the illustrious game. This incident joins the abundance of evidence in the face of a miserable 6-6 season which has betrayed the fractures apparent throughout Johnson's crumbling program.

Only last Friday in fact were Tech fans faced with similarly distressing news, when WR Quentin Sims, a former two-star "CPJ special," revealed his transfer, presumably to the FCS where he belongs. In classic Johnson fashion, the reasons for this action "were not immediately [made] available" to the media. Sims's defection is the latest in what's been a virtual Conga line of departures in the last year, among them the dismissal of touted A-back Chris Jackson for a "violation of team rules," as well as the transfers of ballyhooed 4-star QB Jordan Luallen and backup QB Jaybo Shaw. Most puzzling of all was the bizarre transfer in early December of former starting safety Cooper Taylor, a Tech legacy and a once promising defender, who succumbed to mysterious "heat-related symptoms" in the opener versus SC State, never to be heard from again.

This attrition only underscores Johnson's growing lack of control over his team, something he freely admitted to in late November. Then, in a statement reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Johnson lamented his inability "to find the hot button on this team":

"When asked what motivated last year’s ACC championship team, [Johnson] said, 'If I knew I would use it this year. I don’t know. It just happens.'"

You heard it straight from the coach, folks! No teaching or motivation necessary. Apparently inspired play on the gridiron is merely some nebulous, uncertain thing-a-majig that just sort of "happens." As it turns out, Johnson doesn't really even understand how his team became motivated enough last year to win a championship, even if it was only the ACC and they still managed to lose to 6-5 UGA. Maybe it was dumb luck? Perhaps fueled by the most talented foursome ever on the same roster at Georgia Tech? None of which were recruited by Coach Johnson? Do you think?

Hall
The disruptions haven't been limited to transfers and academic casualties either. Last November, B-back and "high character" Johnson recruit Daniel Drummond was the recipient of a mandatory 12 month NCAA suspension of eligibility for... shh, don't tell anyone!... steroid use. And as previously mentioned, lineman Robert Hall was arrested and charged in June with battery for his brutalization of a young woman, an offense which the harsh disciplinarian Johnson greeted with a rigorous one game suspension for the opener versus prolific South Carolina State.

Even the rule-abiding members of the team have been finding ways to run afoul of the standard modes of decorum. Weeks ago, Tech fans were incensed when a seemingly-innocent exchange on Jonathan Dwyer's Twitter account belied current players Will Jackson and Roderick Sweeting turning on their own supporters and openly criticizing the loyalty of Tech fans.

And so the saga continues. Academic failure, attrition, discontent, rule-breaking, and now losses abound, and "The Man Who Wins Everywhere He Coaches" finds himself square in the middle. Surely now is where all that hard-won experience acquired at the Naval Academy and in Division 1-AA really pays off. At the rate things are going however, Johnson may not even need to draw on such a skill set, as he may soon enough find himself out of players left to coach.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Weedwhacker wrap

Notes as we approach the I-Bowl:

  • There was little fanfare as the Georgia Tech football team arrived in Shreveport Thursday, and in fact it turns out the bowl organizers were so unimpressed with their selection that they did not even bother to familiarize themselves with the school's color scheme:
    "Following a short bus ride to the team hotel, the Hilton downtown, the 6-6 Yellow Jackets were greeted with minimal fanfare...

    I-Bowl executive director Missy Setters and 2010 chairman Jim Hagan welcomed the team in a hotel lobby decorated in Georgia Tech pennants and laced in black and yellow."

  • Apparently the relentlessly stubborn Coach Johnson is the first coach "in recent memory" to close I-Bowl practices to the public. Freaking I-Bowl practices. Perhaps Johnson is having a flashback to his Navy days when playing Air Force was actually a meaningful game.

  • As you may know, the Georgia Tech Athletic Association last week extended its discounted ticket offer, previously scheduled to expire on the 12th, to Christmas day. How jolly of them. According to Associate AD Wayne Hogan, "The response from our fans for this special ticket offer has been very good," however the principles of free-market economics would suggest that they're doing this because no one wants to see two boring teams in a podunk bowl.

  • To that end, the Associated Press has described GT's tactics as "[going] the full used car salesman route":
    "The game isn’t that far away and will feature the nation’s top two rushing teams, but fans have been unimpressed enough that the university extended the deal until Christmas in hopes of spurring sales.

    “With Christmas around the corner, tickets make for perfect gifts or stocking stuffers,” associate athletic director Wayne Hogan said in a school news release."
    What a classy reflection this savvy ploy is casting upon our great institution. Was there no way to arrange for free hot dogs and Cokes with the Shreveport folks to further sweeten the deal? Or how about a free $5 coupon off the purchase of your next Poulan™ Weed Eater™ brand electric or gas-powered trimmer?

    Way to put a marketable product on the field Coach Johnson!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Five-peat!



Much is spoken about Paul Johnson's dominance in the Commander-In-Chief's Trophy series, where he won the annual competition among the three service academies five years running from 2003-2007. What is less frequently mentioned is the record of the teams Johnson beat to achieve this distinction. With the unique opportunity now afforded America's newly-ordained "fourth" service academy this bowl season, Johnson's previous successes merit a closer examination:

YearArmyAir Force
20030-137-5
20042-95-6
20054-74-7
20063-94-8
20073-99-4
TOTAL12-4729-30


The first thing one notices: Johnson enjoyed a veritable gravy train of miserable Army teams-- in fact his tenure at Navy paralleled one of the losingest six-year stretches in the history of Army football. Further was Johnson the beneficiary of an Air Force program which compiled three consecutive losing seasons for the first time in twenty-five years, and which finished with fewer than five losses only once in Johnson's six seasons. All told, across Johnson's streak, he faced only two teams from either academy that even finished the season with a winning record.

Yes, Navy football was quite bad when Johnson arrived. And yes he should be afforded every accolade due a coach who annually cobbled together winning seasons out of the 110th ranked schedule. But it's not like he was conquering a pair of credible opponents on a yearly basis in some heroic struggle for service academy pre-eminence.

Of course the myth of Johnson's infallibility in rivalry games has already been thoroughly discredited against five-loss UGA, and six-loss UGA again, illustrating all the more poignantly that Navy football is a far, far cry from the rigors inherent in piloting a major conference program, even if it does play in the "Almost Competitive" ACC.

Monday, December 6, 2010

What Air Force fans are saying...


WanderingFalcon: Not particularly excited about playing a more athletic Navy in a bowl..."

AFAfan: Don't worry...this years GT team isn't[more athletic]. I'm actually a bit disappointed after looking at their record and stats. We will be favored to win. (...) They'll probably promote the game as the #1 and #2 rushing teams, like it will be some kind of offensive fireworks show...but it will more likely be like a low pitchers duel.

FledglingFalcon: What AF has going for them compared to GT is discipline. GT will have slightly bigger & faster players, but as we've seen time and time again, that means squat compared to heart.

BirdBorneIED: IMO: Least entertaining matchup we could have received. I will not fly out for this one. I would have loved to see us play Clemson, Miami or BC and would not have missed being there"

FlyZoomie08: GT is a yawn. I really wanted Clemson or Miami.

ProudoftheFalcons: We will absolutely demolish Georgia Tech.




Turns out even service academy fans are bored to tears by the "Spread Option."

And imagine how ESPN2 must feel about having to broadcast this stinker. It wouldn't surprise me at all if they moved it to the more lightly-regarded ESPNU, perhaps in favor of poker or some kind of cheerleading competition.

Note how the Air Force fans are actually more confident about beating GT than they are about beating Navy! But I thought this thing would take off with the "better athletes" Coach Johnson would be recruiting to Georgia Tech?

Bottom line: We need to send Coach Johnson and his chickencrap offense back to Annapolis where they belong! Hire a hungry young coach who will upgrade our recruiting, reintroduce the concepts of defense and special teams, and most importantly bring our offense back into the 21st century!

Do it NOW or do it later. Your choice D-Rad. You're already pushing discounted tickets to the Weedwhacker Bowl. This isn't like firing your average coach-- it will take many years to repair the damage which "Spread Option" football will do to our roster and national identity. The longer you wait, the more extensive this reclamation project will be.

Major programs knew this about Johnson, which is why the only other job offers "The Man Who Wins Everywhere He Coaches" had coming were Duke and SMU. Consider yourself warned!

Another kind of championship



A year ago Coach Paul Johnson made the statement that he didn't come to GT to win an ACC championship-- he came to win "another" kind of championship. Who could have known this was what he meant?

In other news: The GTAA is selling discounted $14 tickets in, um, "commemoration" of our 14th consecutive bowl appearance. What generosity in these difficult times!