Showing posts with label aac schedule. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aac schedule. Show all posts

Tulane Football dropped to 2-5 on the season (and 1-2 in the American Conference) in a 20-13 loss to former Conference USA foe UCF yesterday in Orlando, FL.

At this point, we know the program is done with moral victories, so I don't want to go crazy in celebrating a loss... But here are the key points from the game yesterday.

1. The Tulane Defense is Actually Very Good

The biggest surprise this year, in my opinion, was not the foibles of the special teams unit but a strange regression for the Tulane Defense.

By the end of last season, capped off by a bowl appearance, "mid-major Michigan State" was thrown around frequently to describe the defensive powerhouse that Tulane was honestly becoming. Lorenzo Doss was picked as the next big thing, and anyone who knew anything about this team expected for the "bend but don't break" Green Wave to come back.

It didn't quite happen like that. In the first game of the season, the secondary broke down against the Tulsa Golden Hurricane and couldn't stop a comeback that culminated in a double overtime loss.

Things didn't look better when the Duke Blue Devils and Rutgers Scarlet Knights put up points at will against the prized element of our program.

That seems to be changing though. Last week at home, Tulane held the UConn Huskies to three points, facilitating another home victory with minimal offensive production in the absence of Tanner Lee. Fair enough, but it's still UConn, right?

Well, this week may be a true turning point. In the last two matchups with UCF, the Golden Knights put up 110 points of offense combined. It was not good, and the Green Wave didn't belong on the same field.

Yesterday, however, the Tulane Defense did everything it possibly could to keep its team in the game. In the second half especially, Tulane forced two consecutive three-and-outs to set up potential game-tying drives. This is what you have to do playing a good team on the road, and they stepped up every chance they had.

2. Nick Montana muffed a meaningless play, and now everyone is freaking out but it did not matter. 

You have probably seen this, right?


With :05 left in the first half, Nick Montana thought he had a first down and instinctively spiked the ball in a last ditch effort to stop the clock.

SB Nation, Bleacher Report, and ESPN could not resist the urge to post this as a not top ten-type of play involving "Joe Montana's son." The fact remains though:
It's whatever. I am sure Nick is capable of handling that type of attention given his last name, but he did everything he could as a third string quarterback to give his team a chance to win. In the fourth quarter, he threw deep shots on first and fourth down (including escaping two sacks) that his receivers dropped. He did what he had to do.

3. DiRocco Nailed a 42 yarder, and it was awesome. 
The narrative that DiRocco isn't any good was easy to latch onto. He missed field goals, extra points, and pretty much anything that involved holding a football and kicking it at something.

CJ was adamant, however, that DiRocco had the ability to play at this level, as a former first-team prospect out of the state of Florida. In particular, the snapping has been horrid, and this has caused a dozen opportunities where the play was mis-timed, which wreaks havoc on kickers mentally and physically.

He hit a good one yesterday, and you have to hope he's back on track after a pretty disastrous introduction to college football.

4. Tulane Could Have Won 

We out-gained UCF 278 to 233 in total yards. Tulane had greater time of possession. The Green Wave was +2 in turnover margin yesterday. It all adds up.

In the end, they were not able to nab a second score to tie it up. UCF is the upper level of the American Conference, and you have to make some plays to get out of there with a rare road victory.

That said, the Green Wave showed tangible progress yesterday. It wasn't enough for a win, but it is enough for me to get psyched for the Halloween showdown with Cincinnati.

Tulane has a week off and some momentum and fire after leaving Orlando. Let's see what they bring to Yulman against another top team from the American Conference.

The Tulane Green Wave earned its first American Conference victory ever by beating the UConn Huskies 12-3 in a home victory.

Here are the key takeaways:

1. This was important. UConn is not a great team, or even an average team, but they are a team. In our conference. As their hometown paper remarked, "Both teams need a win. Badly." Tulane was the team that survived today.

2. Nick Montana earned a W. The son of Joe started 11-games last year in a season that ended in a bowl berth. Losing the starting job to Tanner Lee in camp couldn't have been a great feeling, but Nick stayed with the program and had a chance to lead tonight.

The word that came to mind was efficiency. Arm strength has always been the challenge for Montana, but he delivered a series of effective throws on short routes to keep drives alive. He didn't cough the ball up or sustain as many sacks as he regularly did last year. All in all, great game for a third stringer coming in for his first start of the year, right?

3. Anthony DiRocco put one through the uprights. From the right hashmark in the fourth quarter, DiRocco helped to extend the Tulane lead in a close game. He wasn't a liability, and he took care of a tough but critical kick. It's too soon to tell whether the Cairo Santos visit will be a turning point for his season, but tonight was the first solid game he has had in a Tulane jersey.

4. Defense had swag tonight. The Tulane defense has been a bit of a surprise this year given sky high hopes entering the season.

The unit showed up tonight. Three turnovers --- two of which ended with a Darion Monroe recovery --- let us attain a +3 turnover margin this game. This was highlighted by a safety after a bad run call on the 1 yard line for UConn. Defense produced offense tonight.

5. Yulman Stadium remains undefeated as a venue in night games. It's also 2-1 all-time with the lone loss to #22 Georgia Tech.

Tulane will head back on the road to face UCF in Orlando, FL next week.


This actually doesn't count as news at all, as apparently this has been out for a couple months. I was looking it up today though, and it was news to me, so there.

Via CBS Connecticut, Tulane men's basketball will bring the following schools to New Orleans (though the dates have not been released):

  • UCF
  • Cincinnati
  • UConn
  • Houston
  • USF
  • Memphis
  • SMU*
  • Temple
  • Tulsa
Additionally, their away opponents will consist of UCF, Cinci, UConn, East Carolina*, Houston, Memphis, USF, Temple, and Tulsa.

The two asterisk teams, SMU and East Carolina, will be the only two squads that Tulane will not place twice in the season. The AAC really threw us a bone there.

On the bright side, Tulane students and NOLA locals will get to enjoy some serious talent coming through next season. Obviously having the national championship-winning team come to your house is pretty sick, but SMU, Cinci, Memphis, SMU, and Temple will all be strong draws as well. Of course, Tulsa is coming off of a tournament appearance as well.

If Tulane was looking for a greater national presence, they certainly have found that. This should be the strongest conference schedule since the last breakdown of Conference USA, for sure.