OPENING STATEMENT
Good afternoon. Certainly great to have Josey back next week. Sounds like he's doing a great job in Denver, and then Quinn Early is just a tremendous former player, a tremendous person and really kind of a neat story about his whole deal. It'll be great to have him back, as well.
Just looking backward for a minute or two, just a couple thoughts about Saturday's game. Obviously the loss was disappointing, and a little bit frustrating for everybody. But the bottom line is good teams learn from their mistakes. We came in Sunday like we always do, looked at the film, looked at the good and bad, and that's true, win or loss, it's just how we do things.
The big thing is to really examine the things that did work well, why they worked well, the benefit they produced and then also where we came up short, what the causes were and how do we move forward.
A couple obvious observations from the game, our communication and ability to handle the environment wasn't always what it needs to be, so that's something we can certainly improve upon. I think Penn State's defense certainly played a really good game, and didn't allow us to really play with the kind of consistency we'd like to offensively, so it's a credit to them.
And then we had some opportunities for some big plays, and it's true in every game, but when you lose a game, those things are magnified a little bit more and become even that much more important. I think that was part of the deal, as well.
As we move forward right now, I think every good player I've been around, every good team I've been around has tough days, and that certainly was the case the other day. The other part about that, good players and good people move forward and they learn from those mistakes, and usually those things will benefit them if they take them the right way, and that's really the challenge that our football team has right now.
Looking forward to Purdue, same four captains will go out for the toss. You've got Parker Hesse, Jake Gervase on defense, and Nate Stanley, Keegan Render offensively. I do have one injury to report, Shaun Beyer was hurt yesterday in non-contact practice, so he'll definitely be out this week. It may be a couple weeks. I'll know more here as we go along, but I'll keep you apprised of that as we go along.
And then to turn our attention towards Purdue, basically it's much like last week. We're playing a really good football team, a team that's very, very dangerous and very explosive, very capable, and then playing them on the road in a tough environment. A lot of similarities there.
Purdue plays good defense, and I think that was probably the biggest story about their success last year. New staff comes in and I think the defensive success -- they had really been struggling defensively for years, and they did a great job last year defensively, and then beyond that, I think certainly with Coach Brohm's reputation, it's back up to the way they play on offense. They're very innovative, very explosive and very, very productive. So they've got a good offensive football team with a lot of big-play capable type players, so it's going to be a tough team for us to defend.
A lot of those guys are on their special teams, as well. We're going to have to be at our best in all three phases to have a chance. Bottom line is we're going to have to be focused, disciplined, play good team football, and then obviously be able to handle the challenge of being on the road and playing in front of a lively crowd.
That's kind of where it's at right now, and the nature of college football, every game is extremely important. We don't play 160 of them, so every game is important, and this week quite simply for us, there's nothing more important than playing this ballgame. That's where we're at. We'll try to finish up our preparation and travel over there on Friday and put a good game on the field Saturday.
I'll throw it out for questions.
Q. Is Nate Stanley going to start?
KIRK FERENTZ: I hope so, yeah. He's fine. He threw the ball well today, and I think he's good to go.
Q. When a captain like Nate struggles in a game, what do you tell him mentally to kind of bounce back?
KIRK FERENTZ: Well, it's kind of the point I made a little while ago. I think all good players have tough days, and I talked to him about that on Sunday. I mean, I haven't been around a good quarterback or a good player at any position that doesn't have a rough outing. It's just the nature of sports, especially when you're playing against a good team, and Penn State is very athletic, very aggressive. They had a great effort, made it tough on us, and it wasn't like we played a perfect game as a unit offensively, so a lot of that goes into it.
Quarterbacks obviously garner a lot of attention, and it's just part of the deal. But probably the best story I can give you, somebody pointed out, Chuck Knoll made a reference one time about Bradshaw had had a tough day, and he mentioned Nolan Ryan, who in the '70s and '80s was a pretty good pitcher. So he's out there on the mound. The distance to the plate never changes; the ball is perfectly round, and if you get a scuff on a baseball they put a new one in there, somebody sneezes on one they give you a new one, and you've got all the time you want in between pitches. Nobody is going to hit you in the face when you deliver the ball. He threw no hitters, he also got knocked out in the first inning. To think of a quarterback is going to go out with a ball that's not real symmetrical and in conditions that are very, very tough and challenging, to think quarterbacks aren't going to have struggles at some point, that's probably not realistic.
That's how I look at it, and we don't have a better guy on our football team. Nobody works harder, more invested, so he'll bounce back.
Good afternoon. Certainly great to have Josey back next week. Sounds like he's doing a great job in Denver, and then Quinn Early is just a tremendous former player, a tremendous person and really kind of a neat story about his whole deal. It'll be great to have him back, as well.
Just looking backward for a minute or two, just a couple thoughts about Saturday's game. Obviously the loss was disappointing, and a little bit frustrating for everybody. But the bottom line is good teams learn from their mistakes. We came in Sunday like we always do, looked at the film, looked at the good and bad, and that's true, win or loss, it's just how we do things.
The big thing is to really examine the things that did work well, why they worked well, the benefit they produced and then also where we came up short, what the causes were and how do we move forward.
A couple obvious observations from the game, our communication and ability to handle the environment wasn't always what it needs to be, so that's something we can certainly improve upon. I think Penn State's defense certainly played a really good game, and didn't allow us to really play with the kind of consistency we'd like to offensively, so it's a credit to them.
And then we had some opportunities for some big plays, and it's true in every game, but when you lose a game, those things are magnified a little bit more and become even that much more important. I think that was part of the deal, as well.
As we move forward right now, I think every good player I've been around, every good team I've been around has tough days, and that certainly was the case the other day. The other part about that, good players and good people move forward and they learn from those mistakes, and usually those things will benefit them if they take them the right way, and that's really the challenge that our football team has right now.
Looking forward to Purdue, same four captains will go out for the toss. You've got Parker Hesse, Jake Gervase on defense, and Nate Stanley, Keegan Render offensively. I do have one injury to report, Shaun Beyer was hurt yesterday in non-contact practice, so he'll definitely be out this week. It may be a couple weeks. I'll know more here as we go along, but I'll keep you apprised of that as we go along.
And then to turn our attention towards Purdue, basically it's much like last week. We're playing a really good football team, a team that's very, very dangerous and very explosive, very capable, and then playing them on the road in a tough environment. A lot of similarities there.
Purdue plays good defense, and I think that was probably the biggest story about their success last year. New staff comes in and I think the defensive success -- they had really been struggling defensively for years, and they did a great job last year defensively, and then beyond that, I think certainly with Coach Brohm's reputation, it's back up to the way they play on offense. They're very innovative, very explosive and very, very productive. So they've got a good offensive football team with a lot of big-play capable type players, so it's going to be a tough team for us to defend.
A lot of those guys are on their special teams, as well. We're going to have to be at our best in all three phases to have a chance. Bottom line is we're going to have to be focused, disciplined, play good team football, and then obviously be able to handle the challenge of being on the road and playing in front of a lively crowd.
That's kind of where it's at right now, and the nature of college football, every game is extremely important. We don't play 160 of them, so every game is important, and this week quite simply for us, there's nothing more important than playing this ballgame. That's where we're at. We'll try to finish up our preparation and travel over there on Friday and put a good game on the field Saturday.
I'll throw it out for questions.
Q. Is Nate Stanley going to start?
KIRK FERENTZ: I hope so, yeah. He's fine. He threw the ball well today, and I think he's good to go.
Q. When a captain like Nate struggles in a game, what do you tell him mentally to kind of bounce back?
KIRK FERENTZ: Well, it's kind of the point I made a little while ago. I think all good players have tough days, and I talked to him about that on Sunday. I mean, I haven't been around a good quarterback or a good player at any position that doesn't have a rough outing. It's just the nature of sports, especially when you're playing against a good team, and Penn State is very athletic, very aggressive. They had a great effort, made it tough on us, and it wasn't like we played a perfect game as a unit offensively, so a lot of that goes into it.
Quarterbacks obviously garner a lot of attention, and it's just part of the deal. But probably the best story I can give you, somebody pointed out, Chuck Knoll made a reference one time about Bradshaw had had a tough day, and he mentioned Nolan Ryan, who in the '70s and '80s was a pretty good pitcher. So he's out there on the mound. The distance to the plate never changes; the ball is perfectly round, and if you get a scuff on a baseball they put a new one in there, somebody sneezes on one they give you a new one, and you've got all the time you want in between pitches. Nobody is going to hit you in the face when you deliver the ball. He threw no hitters, he also got knocked out in the first inning. To think of a quarterback is going to go out with a ball that's not real symmetrical and in conditions that are very, very tough and challenging, to think quarterbacks aren't going to have struggles at some point, that's probably not realistic.
That's how I look at it, and we don't have a better guy on our football team. Nobody works harder, more invested, so he'll bounce back.