Turner Gill Wednesday "Presser" Rewind
With the bye week Turner Gill didn't have his usual Tuesday presser but he did talk with media members briefly on Wednesday after practice. The big news obviously had to do with Daymond Patterson. Here's the rest.
Opening Statement:
"Our guys are definitely still focused on trying to get better. I like what I've been seeing in the two practices we've had so far. Our guys are definitely in tune and trying to get better as a football team."
On what went into the decision of holding out Daymond Patterson for the rest of the season:
"It's tough but it's what is best. You don't want to have a senior year where you are only able to play half of the season. That's really what it came down to. Yeah, he could maybe come back at some time during the season and be available, but then we only have a few games left. Do we want that to happen? We don't know how long it would take him to come back at 100 percent. Both of us talked about it and we agreed together that sitting out the rest of the year would be the best thing for him and the best thing for our football team."
On the advantages of having Daymond Patterson come back from a leadership standpoint:
"It's nothing but good having a guy with that kind of experience come back for another year. He's going to help us out this year as far as teaching our guys. We're obviously going to miss him, but it's an opportunity for someone else and it will definitely make us stronger as we move forward to next season."
On whether the depth at the wide receiver spot helped him make the decision:
"We've got a lot of guys who haven't played a whole lot of football and he especially is one of the more experienced guys on the team at this time. We've got a lot of good guys at that position and now we'll have to see who will rise to the top. We are going to miss him though."
On the overall health of the team:
"We'll find out Tuesday or Wednesday if (Patrick) Dorsey could have a chance of being available. We'll see how he practices in the next few days. I think we'll get (JaCorey) Shepherd back. We'll see what he does in the middle of next week. We'll hopefully get back two or three guys. We should be a little more healthy then we were (going into the Georgia Tech game)."
On the recent play of cornerback Dexter McDonald:
"He played more (at Georgia Tech). (Isaiah) Barfield got hurt and he had to play in that position. I thought he did some good things. It was good to get him some experience, particularly playing at corner. He's played some special teams, but it was great to get him on the defensive side and get a lot of reps. We definitely saw some good confidence out of him in how he played throughout the game. Obviously he's inexperienced and he has a long way to go but there was good progress being made particularly in that ball game (Georgia Tech)."
On how he has felt about safety Keeston Terry's progression:
"He's doing alright. He's still a freshman. We have a lot of youth on our football team and we have some talented guys. There are still some things he needs to get a feel for as far as what we're doing defensively and what the offense is doing. I think he's playing okay."
On the mood in the locker room since Saturday's loss:
"It's been good. They're moving on. That's what you have to do in life. Learn from what your past experience is and what you can do to get better. That's what our players are focused on. They're getting their time in and talking to our coaches about what they need to do to improve their play and improve our football team's play."
On what his coaching staff has done to improve the defensive schemes:
"We talk about that. It's always a daily talk. It's putting together a lot of different things. Some of it is scheme-wise; some of it is personnel. You have to find the right combination of those two. Every day and every week we're trying to find ways to get better. Whether you win or lose a football game, you're always trying to find a way to get better. We're talking about a lot of things. We'll make some adjustments and we'll be better prepared against Texas Tech."
11 comments
|
0 recs |
Do you like this story?
Comments
I thought that too
When you don’t have any real answers, why not?
While having him say:
“Our linebackers are a huge disappointment. They’re slower than we thought, they don’t tackle well, and good Lord they over pursue almost every play. But, for the most part, they’re not getting tossed aside like our D line is. And then there is our secondary. Well I think we have a secondary. We’ve got some really young kids back there. And they’re learning a lot from our LBs….how to miss tackles, how to take bad angles. It’s frustrating. Our D was a historic failure last weekend. I really need to recruit, recruit, recruit, nothing but D linemen for the next couple of years. Sigh. From that standpoint, we need a paient fanbase.”
would be refreshing, I doubt it would be a good move as far as motivating his team.
"No time for questions. No time for games. Start kickin' ass and takin' down the names." - Dave Mustaine.
You want to know something scary...
The team hasn’t watched tape of the GT game. And apparently they don’t plan to do so.
If you watch the gridiron...
he sure seems eager to turn the page. Not sure that’s a great approach.
Questions, Comments? email me at denverjhawk@hotmail.com
I don't think it is.
Yeah, it was bad. But it definitely could be used as a teaching moment.
"No time for questions. No time for games. Start kickin' ass and takin' down the names." - Dave Mustaine.
I can kind of understand though.
Watching the Gridiron was demoralizing enough, I’d hate to have to actually watch the whole thing.
Not much but embarrassment can come from watching it though. Seeing yourself miss tackles and take bad angles isn’t going to make you do it better next time. It’s something that needs to be practiced. The sad thing is that it apparently wasn’t practiced too much beforehand. This is day one refresher stuff. No reason things should have went the way that they did.
www.oreadboomkings.fantake.com
I'm sure it's all in the name of mental health...
Seeing yourself miss tackles and take bad angles isn’t going to make you do it better next time.
To an extent, your point is well taken. That’s basic stuff and it’s simply unbelievable how bad we’ve looked in those ares in all three games. At the same time, isn’t not watching – and not learning – from that performance probably the only way to make it an even worse game?
Among the people I watched that game with was a Nebraska fan. And we all know how they want Turner Gill to succeed even more than we do. And when Turner came out at halftime and told the reporter “our schemes are fine, we just need to tackle better…” he about went through the roof, as I’m sure you all did. There is perhaps an argument to be made that the players don’t need to watch that film (one I’d disagree with, but I can understand), but I sure as hell hope the coaches have been poring over. And that’s something I fear also isn’t happening.
by hiphopopotamus on Sep 23, 2011 9:14 AM CDT up reply actions
Coaches definitely need to watch it.
There’s no doubt about that. I just think the players can do without. Hopefully they’re embarrassed enough. And if they’re not, seeing it isn’t going to make it sink in. This just feels like one of those things a 18-22 year old needs to put behind them.
One of my bigger concerns is that the next time a team scores 2 quick touchdowns in a row against us, the team will get that “here we go again” mentality and things will snowball.
www.oreadboomkings.fantake.com
I think I'd argue
that if a 18-22 year old isn’t mentally tough enough to be able handle watching film of his bad performance…..then he shouldn’t be playing football.
In the words of Dan Hawkins……“this ain’t intramurals”.
"No time for questions. No time for games. Start kickin' ass and takin' down the names." - Dave Mustaine.
I'm not saying they're mentally tough enough.
Just that nothing good would come from watching it. Why rub it in? Sometimes it’s just better to move on.
www.oreadboomkings.fantake.com
After reading this:
http://www.kansas.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1268931
I get a sense that at least Vic Shealy has watched the tape.
I’ll give him props for being candid.
"No time for questions. No time for games. Start kickin' ass and takin' down the names." - Dave Mustaine.

by 
















