Brown beat Yale 20-0 last week, the first time the Bulldogs have been shutout since 2009.
At
times Yale moved the ball well, but did not convert a single third
down. The Bulldogs were 0-10 on third downs and 0-2 on fourth down
conversions. They are just 41 percent on third
downs and 39 percent on fourth downs on the season.
"You
need to be able to convert on third down," Yale coach Tony Reno said.
"It’s something we work on every week. We spend a lot of practice time
on it. We put ourselves in way too many
third and longs. Our focus is to get in third and short, third in
mediums. It’s one of those things we’ve done really well at times.
BRIGHT SPOT
In what has been a dismal season for the Bulldogs, newcomer Tyler Varga has certainly been one of the few bright spots.
Varga
leads the nation with 199.4 all-purpose yards per game. The sophomore
also leads the Ivy League with 119 rushing yards per contest and is the
only player in the league this season
to rush for over 200 yards. Varga had 220 yards against Columbia, the
sixth-highest total in Yale history.
A TOUGH TASK
Yale will have its hands full Saturday with Princeton’s NFL prospect DL Mike Catapano.
He leads the Ivy League with 10 sacks. He is 6-4, 270.
"A
lot of good players take plays off," Reno said. "He doesn’t. He plays
hard on every play. He doesn’t deviate form the scheme and that goes
along with his ability."
Added Oppenheimer: "He’s a huge, strong kid. He plays so hard every play, snap to whistle. He’s so hard to block."
ALMOST
Kyle Cazzetta’s punt of 72 yards last week at Brown was three yards shy of Yale’s program record.
There is no conversion problem. It's a penalties on converted 3rd downs problem! Probably half of those conversion failures resulted after a penalty on a 3rd and short and a successful conversion.
ReplyDeleteThere is no conversion problem. It's a penalties on converted 3rd downs problem! Probably half of those conversion failures resulted after a penalty on a 3rd and short and a successful conversion.
ReplyDeleteAnother passive/aggressive shot by Reno? Or does he just need coaching on communicating with the press "A lot of GOOD players take plays off"....
ReplyDeleteYes,6:16pm, you made a great point. Passive aggressive. That's why the players can't wait for the season to be over and to get the hell away from that disrespectful, arrogant human.
ReplyDeleteAgain, this guy is no where near being a coach, exhibits no leadership qualities what so ever. What a total bust
ReplyDeleteThey can't get away from him because he puts them through a brutal offseason. That's why people aren't sticking around. A constant year of Reno is toooo long
ReplyDelete