Who's right? Urban Meyer or Lane Kiffin? Was Kiffin going for the win?
Here
is the full story on Urban Meyer’s claim that Lane Kiffin wasn’t
playing for the win. I watched the game on CBS and I saw it again on
SEC Sports Digital. There are definitely some conclusions about the
way this game ended that non-partisan observers can agree on.
Summary of What Happened
The
score is 23-6. Florida is on a nice drive and looks like they will
score again. The CBS commentators were of the opinion that the game
was out of reach. Then Tim Tebow fumbles inside the five-yard line
with less than 12 minutes left in the fourth quarter.
At 11:37 in the fourth quarter, Tennessee gets the ball back.
On Tennessee’s first play, they lose yardage and it takes 37 seconds off the clock before they snap the ball for second down. There is no indication by the Tennessee players to hurry.
Jonathan Crompton pass complete to Bryce Brown for three yards to the Tennessee 37. The next play takes another 35 seconds from the end of the play to the next snap. Tick, tick, tick.
Jonathan Crompton pass complete to Bryce Brown for 21 yards to the Florida 42 for a first down. Play No. 3 takes 25 seconds from the end of the play until the hike of the ball. Running back
Bryce Brown had an opportunity to go out of bounds, but did not. The clock keeps ticking.
The
Tennessee Volunteers score their first touchdown of the day with 8:11
left in the fourth quarter. The drive is for seven plays, 66 yards and
takes off three minutes and 26 seconds. The CBS commentators do not speak as if the Vols are back in the game.
Florida gets the ball back for three plays and three yards, taking another 2:10 off the clock.
Tennessee
gets the ball back for nine plays 27 yards, and another 04:10 is wiped
off the clock before Crompton throws an interception. Florida runs out
the clock for the last 1:51.
Game over. Florida wins 23-13.
Florida Coach Urban Meyer’s Statement
"I
didn't feel like they were going for the win. They wanted to shorten
the game," Meyer said. "I think that was the plan. I remember looking
out there and there's 10 minutes left in the game and there's no
no-huddle, they are down, I think it was 23-6 and no urgency on
Tennessee's part."
There
are several camera shots of Coach Kiffin during the drive in question
but no indication to hurry up by the Vol coach. There was no
indication that he was trying to milk the clock either.
Conclusions
- It appears to be an accurate statement by Meyer that the Vols were
trying to shorten the game as a general strategy. It wasn’t
necessarily a fourth-quarter strategy.
- Coach Meyer was relaying his expertise in coaching that, with less than
12 minutes, and down by two touchdowns, you better hurry it up. With
10 minutes left in the game, and down by 17, it appears that Urban
Meyer was one of just a few people that believed the Vols could still
win. Kiffin did not believe Tennessee could win or he would have
managed the clock differently.
- Coach Kiffin seems to be just trying to call a play that would have a
positive result. Coach Kiffin was not managing the clock well or
hurrying his team up so they could win the game.
In
hindsight, the reality is Tennessee could have gotten back in the
game. It’s a long shot, but Tebow fumbling inside the five isn’t on
the mark either. If Kiffin had a chance to do it over, he would have
run a hurry-up offense, starting with the Tebow fumble. It would have
given the Vols a chance.
Urban
Meyer was right. There was no urgency by Coach Kiffin in the fourth
quarter. After looking at the facts, I believe that Tennessee was not
going for the win but merely for a respectable loss. Kiffin beat the
spread but that was it.
Until next time, I will see you on the ball field.
Jay Holgate is an SEC analyst, freelance writer, and editor of SEC Sports Report. He can be heard around the South on sports radio. He can be reached at editor@SECsportsReport.com.Read the original article at http://bleacherreport.com/articles/260278-urban-meyer-was-right-vols-lane-kiffin-was-not-going-for-the-win/show_full
Comments
You guys are too much! To
You guys are too much! To think that the best coaching staff in the country isn't going for the win. Everyone knows that coach has to coach around our QB. We open up and it's a guaranteed interception.
The funny thing is Meyer is reeling like he lost. Why? He did. Monte schooled him and the new OCoor. Tebow got jacked and packed. Every other team now has the blueprint and we did it with 1/10 the talent and depth. Also, Meyer had every top recruit in the stands to see a route. They saw a team on the rise with true freshmen out hit and out play Florida who couldn't stop them when they knew where the play was going.
Florida got beat up last Saturday and you know and we know what's going to happen next year in Knoxville. Meyer lost respect, recruits, and will soon be looking North. Not for the opportunity to fulfill his dream job, but because he knows the gig is up and every one of you guys know it deep down inside.
So, keep on making excuses to try to make Kiffin look bad because you are playing right into our hands. Keep in mind, right now while you're reading this, Kiffin is calling your commitments. When we sign them, maybe Meyer can say it happenned because his asst's. have the flu!
Go Vols!
Stomp Bama.
Voluvr I'm sure you already
Yep. Now instead of
Yep. Now instead of recruiting and game prep, they have to stop and go back to try to hang on to what they have. Meyer is responding with excuses and insults because he is frustrated and embarrassed. He hasn't had much to worry about lately, but now his world is collapsing in on him. With Tennessee out playing and recruiting them, and now with Miami and FSU now starting to split the Florida talent pool, the run is over and they know it.
Recruits now looking in can easily see that they would rather go to a better coached team headed to championships than a team at the end of their run.
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