But It's A DRY Heat . . .
by: ricko
Pride In The Desert? (Or: Dirk Koetter-Not Ready For Prime Time)
Oct 01, 2006 | 10:01AM | report this

The Arizona State Sun Devils were beaten handily on Saturday by the 14th ranked Oregon Ducks. 48-13. This on the heels of ASU’s drubbing last week at Cal, 49-21. Until the Cal game, the Sun Devils had been ranked in the top 25 each week this season. I guess going three and oh against the likes of Northern Arizona, Nevada, and Colorado will do that for a team in a major conference. But the boys in maroon and gold have been exposed two straight weeks. And that should surprise no one. Head coach Dirk Koetter, (pronounced ‘cutter’), now in his sixth season, has gone 2-18 versus ranked teams since coming to Tempe from Boise State. And he is 0-8 against Cal and USC. And although his overall won-loss record at Arizona State is a few games over .500 (Yippee!), his record against the Pac 10 conference in his five plus years here is 17-27. The Oregon game was played at home in 100 degree temperatures, something his team is used to and was looked at as an advantage. It was anything but.

 

Under the fairness heading, Cal has rebounded nicely from their opening game drubbing at Tennessee, and is trying to prove that game was an aberration. They look like a solid team who will play in an above average bowl game. And Oregon had an off week last week to prepare for ASU in the wake of their highly disputed win over Oklahoma. Who knows what would have happened had Oregon played ASU without a bye. But some cold, hard facts are impossible to ignore. In addition to what I’ve already mentioned, Rudy Carpenter, ASU’s sophomore quarterback, was 6-19 vs. the Ducks with 33 passing yards. No misprint, no touchdowns, one interception. In an extremely crucial point in the game that defined the offensive woes in a nutshell and one that could have turned the momentum immensely, Carpenter missed a wide open Rudy Burgess by several yards. To recap, Oregon received the second half kickoff. The Sun Devils defense produced a three and out, and Oregon’s punter shanked one out of bounds for an 11 yard punt, giving ASU the ball at the Oregon 31 yard line, trailing 24-3. On third and seven, Burgess, their biggest big play threat at the receiver position, got space between him and the defender and was open on an out pattern. He could have run for miles after making the catch. Or at least thirty yards. Except the ball was thrown so poorly that he couldn’t even make an attempt at it. Koetter then decided to go for it, probably rightly so, but didn’t make it, in effect sealing the outcome of the game early with over 25 minutes of football left to be played.

 

The preseason quarterback situation has been well documented. Last year’s starter, Sam Keller, had a stellar start to the ’05 season before being sidelined with an injury halfway through. Carpenter, a red-shirt freshman last year, took over the last five games and the potent offense didn’t miss a beat. Upon further review, however, those games came against the worst defenses in the conference and a Rutgers team in the Insight Bowl that was average defensively, at best. Just before this season, Keller, who was originally named the starter just days earlier before Koetter flip-flopped and gave it to Carpenter, decided he didn’t like the way the whole thing was handled and transferred to Nebraska. He will be eligible to play for the ‘Huskers in ’07 after sitting out this season. The general consensus among Sun Devil fans was that Carpenter was a bit more talented and had more upside, but Keller’s senior leadership has been greatly missed this season. It would be hard to believe Keller would have performed so poorly in the last two games.

In another stunning development, the running game, which has been lackluster during Koetter’s tenure and somewhat of an afterthought used only to keep defenses honest, has turned out to be the offense this season. ASU is deep at that position, and Ryan Torain recorded his second straight 100 yard game against the Ducks.

In all fairness to Rudy Carpenter, he is far from the only problem the Sun Devils have. And it's becoming increasingly evident he is in over his head. He is simply the most visible flaw, as quarterbacks usually are. And ASU did lose four experienced receivers from last year's squad who have proven difficult to replace. Also, the defense, supposedly much improved over last season’s ‘bend and then break’ squad, seems to miss more tackles each week, and the Ducks ran a quick-toss wide receiver screen several times yesterday that seemed to catch the ASU defense off guard every time. Returning to the subject of Dirk Koetter, he has Carpenter run to the sidelines between plays to get the play call directly, which makes it very difficult for a quarterback, especially a young one, to get into the flow of the game, I would think. He had Sam Keller do the same last year, and Andrew Walter before him. Most teams above an eighth grade level would send the play in either through signals or an incoming player. Koetter’s forte has always been offense. He has a great offensive mind, which enabled him to land the job in Tempe. Or at least he used to. But head coaching at a major division one school is a bit out of his league. Call it the Mike Martz syndrome; great offensive mind, not head coaching material, at least not on a national stage. Unfortunately for Sun Devil fans, Koetter was given a contract extension after last season, which is fine if you’re content with going to the Mediocrity Bowl every year. Other than ASU’s 9-3 year in 2004, which ended in a victory over Purdue in the Sun Bowl, Koetter’s Sun Devil teams have been nothing to brag about. And with the recent lack of competitiveness in two important conference games, the program is about as stagnant as can be. Arizona State needs to bite the bullet, replace Koetter at year’s end, and start anew. Easier said than done, of course, with several years left on Koetter’s new deal. But with second tier, or worse, bowl games on the horizon, as well as a half full Sun Devil Stadium fast becoming the norm, fans deserve better. Admittedly, the 73,000 seat “House that Frank Kush Built” isn’t the easiest to fill, given the fact that there is huge competition for the fans’ sports dollars in a city that also has teams in the four major sports, as well as just about any other sporting event one can imagine. But being on national TV and having fans disappear in the second half faster than you can say, “touchdown, Oregon!” is not a good position to be in, especially with Koetter and crew hitting the recruiting trail during the upcoming bye week. I'm guessing ASU's '06 football slogan, "Pride In The Desert," won't be mentioned too often.

 

Speaking of the bye week, perhaps there is a light at the end of the tunnel. ASU has an extra week to prepare for perennial conference doormat USC in the Coliseum on October 14th. And it’s almost basketball season. The Sun Devils have a new coach they hired from North Carolina State. And I hear the Suns are supposed to at least be respectable this year. Hmm. Maybe things aren’t so bad after all.

 

Thanks for taking the time to read.

12 Comments | Add a comment   categories: College Football, Arizona State Sun Devils, Other, Dirk Koetter
 
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gcoach
Oct 1, 2006
11:18 AM
ricko - While my loyalties are with Oklahoma, I live in Minnesota. The Gophers have the same kind of coach that you describe at ASU. Beat the hell out of Temple and Kent State, fall apart against Michigan, Ohio State, Purdue, etc., etc. Beating Michigan last year had more to do with how mediocre Michigan was than how good the Gophers were. The "Little Brown Jug" has gone home. Mason gets them to a Bowl game almost every year and that seems to satisfy the population around here. A ton of offense and pathetic defense is the Gopher style under Mason. Give me something like Georgia, at least. The defense keeps the offense in the game until it does something. It must be hard to score 35 in a game and lose it by giving up 38. The Gophers last hope of being brought back to their level of the 19050's and 1960's left when Lou Holtz took off to ND. Loading up for Red River Shootout! My post will be up in a day or so. This one was good. Thanks for the read!

Last edited by gcoach on October 1st at 11:21 AM.

ricko
Oct 1, 2006
12:48 PM
Well said, gcoach. I have little interest in a team that consistently loses 38-35. The Sun Devils don't even have the potent offense going for them anymore. Dirk may have been a hit at Boise State, but he's in a different league now. And no defense means no prayer against good teams. I will say that I was very impressed with Oregon yesterday. They could make a lot of noise in the coming weeks.

ShooterB
Oct 1, 2006
5:47 PM
Doesn't Jake Plummer have a little brother that could play for ASU? Well, he probably doesn't...but I don't have any other ideas on how to help the program.

The Arizona Cardinals are also a tad disappointing. I don't know how long Warner will be the starter if he doesn't seek treatment for his "fumblies". Or maybe it's already time to bring in Leinart...

ricko
Oct 1, 2006
6:50 PM
Shooter-I've never been one for knee-jerk reactions, but it's time for Leinart. Unfortunately, though, it won't matter. The Cards are ten mill under the cap and need some help, which will not be coming any time soon. Unless the Bidwills sell the team. As for ASU, they're done.

ShooterB
Oct 1, 2006
8:19 PM
I agree, it's time for Leinhart. They need to build on their strengths for the future. If Leinhart can get some time running this offense, just look at the weapons they will have over the next couple of years. Best duo of receivers in the game...and one of the best running backs in the game. Just need some work making the O-line a bit more solid. I know, fans keep waiting...

Miracle
Oct 2, 2006
7:14 AM
I wish his name was pronounced Cooter (like the guy from Dukes of Hazard)

There is a reason the Giants pulled Warner for Manning, and you are watching the exact same TV program now. The uniforms have been changed to protect the innocent.

Does Kurt’s wife call the radio stations in Phoenix and raise hell when the give her husband ####, she did that in St. Louis and it was funny as hell.

ricko
Oct 2, 2006
8:34 AM
No she doesn't Miracle. In fact, the word is she wanted him to retire a couple years ago. As for the Cards fortunes, unless Leinart can block better than the stiffs they have now, it won't get any better. The general feeling around here is that John Elway or Joe Montana wouldn't even help this team.

Last edited by ricko on October 2nd at 9:26 AM.

Nooch
Oct 2, 2006
10:19 AM
Ricko,

I was as surpised as anyone at the outcome of the ASU-UO game this weekend. As you mentioned, the +100 degree heat has always given the Ducks trouble when they travel to Tempe, and Koetter's wide open style of offense has always been dangerous.

However, I agree that the decision to throw a good leader and a productive QB like Keller on the scrapheap seemed a bit premature. Sure, Carpenter looked great last season, and he has a ton of talent. But he might have benefitted from watching a senior QB lead the team this season.

Regarding Koetter, I understand your frustration. Oregon's coach, Mike Belotti, is an offense-first coach and for many seasons his distain for a tough D seemed to sink Oregon into that 8-4, 7-5 trap with an invite to a mid-level bowl every year.

Once they hired Nick Aliotti to run the defense, the team has made dramatic improvement in being a player on the national scene.

gcoach
Oct 2, 2006
10:39 AM
Nooch - Maybe Belotti could talk to Glen Mason and the Gophers would be worth paying some attention to. He is the King of the mid-level to lower-level bowl game. For the first time in 10 years I actually heard someone here verbalize their disdain for Mason.

Nooch
Oct 2, 2006
1:15 PM
gcoach,

Good point about Mason. I think sometimes when a program hasn't done well for years and a coach comes in and acheives some success (i.e., winning record, bowl invites, etc.) the fan base can become complacent. I think Mason did the same thing at Kansas. Got them to be a decent team but never much more.

The same thing happened with Rich Brooks at Oregon. Good coach that brought respectability to the program but never got them to the next level.

Belotti was supposed to do that. However, with the exception of a couple of seasons with Jeff Tedford as the offensive coordinator, Belotti hasn't really been able to get the program into that elite level, either.

However, I am hoping that with two really good coordinators now, Gray Crowton on offense and Nick Aliotti on defense, Belotti can raise the Ducks' game. If he continues to fall short, it may be time to look to a big-name guy with a big-time track record.

Last edited by Nooch on October 2nd at 1:16 PM.

ricko
Oct 2, 2006
1:31 PM
Oregon looked pretty good to me on Saturday, but then that could be due to ASU's ineptitude also. I'm looking for the Ducks to be right there at the end. They should give USC all they can handle, too.

Thanks to all for stopping by, by the way.

Last edited by ricko on October 2nd at 1:32 PM.

ricko
Nov 28, 2006
3:53 PM
Well, now Koetter's been let go. He will resurface somewhere as an offensive coordinator, which is his forte. He will probably be a head coach again someday, and his experience here will make him better prepared. Koetter handled his firing with a lot of class. I wish him well. I am surprised that Lisa Love had the fortitude to eat the rest of his contract, but I think she did what she felt she had to. I applaud her.

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ABOUT ME


ricko
Spent half my life in North Dakota. The other half, so far, in the Valley of the Sun. As a kid, I was always playing, watching, reading, or writing about sports. I lost most of the "playing" along the way, but the rest remains the same. I pledge to refrain from commenting on a blog unless I've read it in its entirety. If I have time, of course. Carry on. Email address: rickoblog@ear
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