Will Levis and the UK offense have a few things to clean up but coach Mark Stoops has been encouraged by the UK offense. (Vicky Graff Photo)
Mark Stoops will be focusing on his own squad this week before Kentucky dives into the thick of the Southeastern Conference schedule. The Wildcats (2-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference), will take on Tennessee-Chattanooga (1-1) Saturday in the last of a three-game homestead to open the season. Kentucky kept its perfect record intact following a 35-28 win over Missouri in its conference opener last weekend at Kroger Field.
“It was a very physical game,” Stoops said Monday. “Our guys were emotionally ready to play, took a lot out of them, played extremely hard, very proud of how physical and how hard we’re playing,” he said.
“(We) just want to get some details fixed up but it’s our job to get our team right here this week, continue to build on the good things we’re doing, tighten up the ship on certain aspects of it. We have a lot of good football ahead of us, so I’m very encouraged and looking forward to this challenge here this week.”
Stoops said his squad did “a lot of very good things,” many of which he said Kentucky can “build on” as the Wildcats delve deeper into the schedule. He added the main emphasis will be his own squad.
“It’s about us this week, much the same, we need to concentrate on ourselves, playing a very good team in Chattanooga, and we just have to focus on ourselves,” Stoops said. “… I would never use the word, you would never hear me use the word ‘breather” — that’s not in our vocabulary.
“The only thing we’re interested in is pressing on and moving forward. Any great team, no matter what the competition level is, plays to the best of their ability.”
The biggest point of emphasis for Stoops and his staff will be eliminating turnovers. Kentucky had a fumble and an interception in its last outing. Rodriguez coughed up a ball that was recovered by lineman Eli Cox in the end zone late in the fourth quarter, a score that was rewarded to Cox following further evaluation by the SEC office Monday.
“We’ve talked about it before,” Stoops said. “I captured this (thought), I don’t pretend it was mine, it was another coach said it that I listen to. I thought it was a good way to say that ‘when you have the football in your hands, you have the program in your hands’ and that’s a pretty good statement. I think that was coach (P.J.) Fleck if I’m not mistaken. I heard him talking about that. I borrowed that from him, but you know we talk about that. He’ll get it corrected. I’m confident.”
Stoops also will be seeking improvement from the defense. The Wildcats struggled somewhat against the Tigers and failed to get a key stop or sack until late in the fourth quarter.
“If you go back and look at that game, that’s probably one of the worst defensive games that we’re going to play,” Kentucky linebacker Jacquez Jones said. “That’s scary because we came out with a win. We had a lot of mess-ups. We’ve got a lot of stuff to fix, but our ceiling is high.”
4 Responses
IF they can somehow play without the BIG mistakes, they could be really hard to beat for any team.
I agree Jim
Over the years, it seems to me that a turnover costs the team about 3 points and 30 yards of field position on average. Turnover margin is sadly a strong indicator of who will win a game. As we saw this week, that indicator is not always correct, but it is most of the time.
Turnover margin speaks to both sides of the ball, not just the offense coughing it up, but the defense taking it away. The defense missed 2 or 3 real opportunities against Missouri to intercept passes, and on one occasion, the defender had the ball in his grasp only to let it go, and Missouri scored on the next play.
After 2 games, I believe this team has shown strength and consistency on offense. What a turnaround from the last several teams. However, this team’s defense has not measured up to recent UK defenses, and the punting is not as strong as the last 2 years.
Well… The O’Line won this game. The O Line beat up Mizzo up front where it counts. When your O line is hitting on all cylinders, you tend to win football games; turn overs or not. That said, turn overs and simple stupid mistakes can drive a coach to insanity. Want to know what makes Alabama so good? Focus. Every player is focused on his responsibility all the time and looking for a way to do it better. He knows that there is someone just as good as he is waiting to take his job. Go Cats.