Sunday, November 12, 2006

Everything Wrong With DumpDorrell.com

This post has been a long time coming. Honestly, I don't think this is an issue that should gain more attention than the state of the UCLA football team, but fans are quick to point the finger and overshadow the unit as a whole. And so it's time to finally tackle a topic that is at the forefront of the minds of all Bruin football fans: whether or not Coach Karl Dorrell should be fired.

First, let's take a look at reasonable expectations of how UCLA would perform this season. To this point, I expected a 6-4 season - the team had an easy early schedule, but difficult road games at Oregon, Notre Dame, and Cal. A win at one of these schools would be a great accomplishment, and I felt the Bruins had enough in them to pull out one of these games. Of course, UCLA was just 62 seconds away from pulling off its biggest football victory of this decade at Notre Dame.

More importantly, I also expected the Bruins to lose a game they probably shouldn't. And there have been two such losses - a tough road loss to a challenging Washington team, and a bad home loss to a talented Washington State team. In the Pac-10 this season, this type of parity has become the norm - Arizona over Cal, Oregon State over USC, etc. No single team seems to want to run away with the title.

Why should we expect such "mediocrity" from these Bruins? Well, this is a young team. Sure, much of the defense is built of upperclassmen, but they've had to buy into an entirely new system with a new defensive coordinator. On the other side of the ball, there's another new offensive coordinator calling the shots, with an inexperienced quarterback and a backfield of guys stepping into main roles for the first time. No receiver has ever been the defined go-to guy and the offensive line has three guys starting who didn't last season.

With young teams, there will be great highs (Notre Dame) and awful lows (well, Notre Dame). But it's important to keep a level-head on the season as a whole, whether the team has really underachieved relative to its expectations. Honestly, this team isn't Cal, or USC, or Oregon. It doesn't have the talent or the experience. Part of that will keep the team hungry to win, the other part will keep it from actually winning.

So hopefully, it's apparent that these Bruins have performed more or less to expectations. I'm not saying that we, as fans, or they, as players and coaches, should be satisfied with how the season has gone. Obviously, it would've been great not to fall flat and lose against beatable teams, or to actually close out a win that would've completely reshaped the season. But it happens.

Unfortunately, not everyone is seeing this situation so clearly. An inordinate amount of blame is being placed squarely on Karl Dorrell's shoulders because, well, I'm not really sure why. As you scour the message boards on BruinsNation and BruinReportOnline, or read what blogs like DumpDorrell.com have to say, Karl Dorrell has been criticized for everything from playcalling to perpetual mediocrity to not yelling and frowning enough.

First, playcalling. Dorrell has taken a lot of heat for being too conservative in his playcalls, particularly in that infamous Notre Dame game. Without giving the blanket excuse that OC Tom Svoboda calls the plays, it's obvious that Dorrell should know what's going on and the final calls should go through him. So let's take a look at what went down in the Notre Dame game.

UCLA has the ball with around 3 minutes left, deep in its own territory and clinging to a 17-14 advantage. The defense has absolutely stifled Brady Quinn and the Irish all day. The offense has been scrappy, generally ineffective but coming through with a couple of big plays. The Bruins decide to run the ball three straight times, eventually punting the ball with a little over a minute left and over half a field to defend due to their inability to get the game-clinching first down.

Personally, what would I do? I would've run the ball twice, then sent Pat Cowan on a playaction rollout just trying to get the first down. Cowan is not always accurate, but he's fairly mobile and it would've gotten them a shot at a game-clincher. On the road, this is huge. You don't want the home team on the field with the ball and time left.

Then again, what happens in my situation? Maybe Cowan ends up throwing a pick, and Notre Dame has a short field and plenty of time to score. Maybe the throw is incomplete, and 30 precious seconds do NOT run off the clock. Maybe everyone ends up yelling at Dorrell for taking a risk with our most ineffective unit instead of just letting our defense win the game.

That's not what happened. Dorrell decided to leave his best unit on the field at the biggest moment. And is that such a bad idea? I don't think so. The defense had shut down Brady Quinn & Co. all day long, why wouldn't they stop them for just one more minute? In the end, you want your best players against their best players. Strength against strength. Unfortunately, their strength won.

Perpetual mediocrity. That would be defined as unending .500 seasons. Critics will say that last year's 10 win season was a fluke, that the Bruins were lucky to escape with that many. And hey, this is a valid point. Half of those wins were remarkable comebacks. But 10 wins is 10 wins, and there aren't a whole lot of coaches that say they've won 10 games. Trust me, I've seen mediocrity. I've seen coaches that can't coach. I've seen 10 loss seasons. This is not the end of the world.

Lastly, and most ridiculously, are the degradations of Karl Dorrell's personality. Honestly, what does Karl Dorrell's relatively impassive demeanor have to do with how successful our football team is? Okay, so he doesn't jump up and down when we make a huge play or when the refs make a questionable call. He's also not the one to lose his head uncontrollably when the proverbial crap hits the fan. That's just how he is. He's a calm man, a steady man, and his personality should in no way determine whether or not he's a good coach. There are plenty of coaches who yell and scream and show all kinds of "emotion." That sure as hell doesn't mean they're any good (i.e. Jim Mora, Sr.).

A coach is not a cheerleader. He molds a program into a system that fits how he plans to win ballgames. A coach is not out there as a figurehead to embody what emotions a FAN feels. He's there to give his club an opportunity to win. A coach has the responsibility to inspire, yes, but this is done in different ways, and every man is ultimately true to his personality. And most Bruin fans will mock Mike Stoops of Arizona for being a whining, crying "coach" who complains all day long. Is that what you want? Someone who complains more? Criticizing Karl Dorrell's coaching abilities because of his personality is just plain stupid.

This is NOT a flat-out defense of Karl Dorrell. Karl Dorrell does have his faults. His clock management skills are quite poor; he never seems able to call timeouts when he needs to in time-crucial situations. Also, an undercriticized part of this year's Bruins squad has been the excessive amount of penalties on both sides of the ball. Lazy penalties, stupid penalties, all kinds of penalties. Dorrell should take the heat on some of these; he needs to keep his players in line and knowledgeable of their actions. And unfortunately, this has not been a one-time problem, but rather a recurring one week after week.

However, what really ticks me off (or as Peter Griffin would say, "grinds my gears"), is how pitifully ignorant much of the UCLA fanbase is. And that is where the title of this entry applies.

Before the game today, Nick and I were walking through the regular tailgaters to the stadium when we saw two middle-aged men wearing "Dump Dorrell" shirts. Needless to say, it was difficult for the both of us to simply stop in our tracks and throw down right there (no, I've never thrown down before, but it was damn tempting). How can you honestly wear that to a football game? Are you rooting for your alma mater to fall? Because in my mind, if you're wearing a shirt like that, you want us to fail. You want this team to lose so that YOU can see a different coach, even if you don't know what Dorrell has done wrong besides lose very loseable games.

This is the type of sick, pathetic behavior I've come to expect from many fairweather Los Angeles fans. What exactly goes through these minds? Is it, "hey, we've been losing a few games. God, it's that damn coach's fault, let's get rid of him so that we can win again! Even better, let me show everyone how much I disapprove of him by wearing a shirt that says I don't like him! Maybe we can lose and then he'll get replaced sooner!"

What kind of fan are you? You'll also probably give me some babble about firing Dorrell as being "good for the program" and a move that needs to happen for "long-term success." And who do you, Mr. Know-it-all, propose to replace Dorrell with? Do you realize how long it usually takes a football program to be rebuilt and restructured? Will your replacement even be better?

And you! You want to see your team lose? How can you honestly call yourself a supporter of a team, if you want it to fail?

See, everyone is entitled to their own opinion. While I might not agree with why people think Dorrell should be axed, that's their right to have an opinion for such misguided reasons (couldn't resist, sorry). However, UCLA football deserves your support. It's not fair to the players, to the coaches, to everyone involved for you to give up and call for someone's head to fix it all. As long as we're playing, you're cheering. You better as hell want us to win, or you can go sit in the visiting section while I yell at you about how UCLA is better than your school.

The only thing worse than being a fairweather fan who only shows up when our team is good and leaves early regardless of the score (trust me, there are plenty) has got to be the traitor who doesn't support his own team. We can discuss whether or not to fire Dorrell at the end of the season. For now, support our squad.

Of course it's easy to criticize others, but what novel suggestions do I have? All in all, I'm not exactly pleased with Dorrell's coaching. He definitely has his weakness, most of which are entirely unrelated to what he's currently being bashed for. And I, like everyone else, think we could have at least one more win right now.

I don't, however, think Dorrell's coaching has fundamental flaws. It's tough to say "give him time" in the win-now environment, especially when he's had several seasons to establish himself, but that is the way I feel. If his team quits on him and comes out flat in the last few games, then maybe he's lost control of the ship. If he keeps fighting and the team develops, then I don't see anything wrong with Dorrell's performance. At any rate, it's best to be rational and take an objective view from afar (at the end of the season).

You, Mr. DumpDorrell, can hold your peace for just a few more weeks.

1 Comments:

At 7:58 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

best you're feeling kind of stupid now .. huh?! Still feel we should keep Dorrell??

ps. Dude, learn how to write something people will actually read. Make your posts shorter and on point. IF you have more points to make, write more short posts. And break the long posts with subject headings if you must have long posts.

 

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