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Boston College's worst loss of the century

This legit might be the worst loss since the calendar flipped to the year 2000. Failing to score a TD against a UConn team that lost to UMass and Holy Cross just last year. in Year 3. With a 2nd round wr and a 5th year quarterack

FIRE HAFLEY. No more excuses, this dude has no idea what he's doing. Doubt BC pulls the trigger though

Some last-minute UConn game reading

Opponent Preview: UConn​

Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom)
Publisher

Boston College is traveling to UConn for the first time since 2003, and the Eagles are desperate to get back in the win column after back-to-back losses to Clemson and Wake Forest, both of which are now in the AP Top 10.

The Huskies, on the other hand, have one more win than BC at this point of the season. That alone is a shock to pretty much every college football fan.

Granted, UConn's three wins have come against Central Connecticut, Fresno State and FIU. The Huskies, in their first year under head coach Jim Mora, have yet to be competitive versus a Power Five opponent.

Saturday afternoon is their opportunity to do so. Meanwhile, BC will try to establish that, even in a down year, it's still the top FBS program in New England.

WHEN IS BC PLAYING UCONN?​

Saturday, Oct. 29, 12 p.m.

WHERE IS BC PLAYING UCONN?​

Pratt & Whitney Stadium at Rentschler Field, East Hartford, Connecticut

SERIES HISTORY​

BC leads the all-time series, 12-0-2. That's right. UConn has never beaten the Eagles on the gridiron, although the programs have tied twice: first in 1908, next in 1910 (both were scoreless games). The last time they met was in Fenway Park in 2017. AJ Dillon rumbled for 200 yards and two scores, and Jon Hilliman added 107 yards and two more touchdowns as the Eagles blew out the Huskies, 39-16. The year before that, BC shut out UConn, 30-0, in Alumni Stadium.

BREAKING DOWN THE 2022 HUSKIES​

Offense: Zion Turner is a true freshman quarterback who was thrust into the spotlight after Penn State transfer Ta'Quan Robinson tore his ACL in the Huskies' season opener against Utah State. Turner is a dual threat. He has the third most carries of any UConn player this season. Although he's averaging only 5.1 yards per pass attempt, he's completing 61.0% of his passes and has posted a 7:4 touchdown-to-interception ratio so far. It's worth noting, though, that he has yet to throw for more than 100 yards against a Power Five opponent. Here are his combined stats against Syracuse, Michigan and North Carolina State: 28-of-45, 148 pass yards, 1 TD, 0 INT, 4 sacks, 19 carries, 42 rush yards.

It hasn't helped that he's been without his top-two wide receivers—Cam Ross and Keelan Marion—practically the whole season. Aaron Turner has been, by far, the Huskies' most productive wideout in 2022. He's got 31 grabs—19 more than any other UConn player this year—275 receiving yards and three receiving touchdowns. Other targets to keep an eye on are fellow wide receiver Kevens Clercius (12 receptions, 170 yards), who is 6-foot-2 and 212 pounds, and tight end Justin Joly (12 receptions, 130 yards, 1 TD), who is 6-foot-3 and 228 pounds. The Huskies also haver former BC wideout Ethon Williams—except, he hasn't recorded a reception this season.

UConn is even more depleted at running back, where, most recently, it's been down its top-three backs. That includes Nate Carter, a sophomore who racked up 405 yards on the ground in a mere four games. Now, offensive coordinator Nick Charlton is leaning local product Victor Rosa and former Miami transfer Robert Burns to get the job done. Fortunately for the Huskies, they have a transfer-heavy offensive line that entered the week tied for 34th nationally in Pro Football Focus run blocking grade (68.9).

Defense: Mora certainly has a hand in UConn's 3-4 defense. It's a unit that's currently 84th in both rushing defense (156.0 yards allowed per game) and pass defense (239.4 yards allowed per game). Linebacker Jackson Mitchell is probably the next Husky to represent the program at the NFL level. The junior has a nose for the ball. His 11 tackles per game are fourth in the country. What's more, he's assisted on 52 tackles this season, and his 3.5 sacks are tops on the team. He's joined in the second level by right outside linebacker Brandon Bouyer-Randle, a Texas Tech grad transfer who is third on the team with 56 total tackles.

UConn is tied for 64th with 2.13 sacks per game. The Huskies get their most pressure from defensive end Eric Watts. The junior has registered 18 pressures this season, per PFF. Three of those have resulted in sacks. Nose tackle Dal'mont Gourdine has the second-most PFF pressures (10) of any Husky D-Linemen, but his backup, Jelani Stafford, actually has more sacks (2) than Gourdine (1.5).

Teams pick on Tre Wortham most often, however, the senior is UConn's best cover corner. He's been targeted 42 times this season and has allowed jus 22 catches, logging five PBUs and three picks in the process. Safety Malik Dixon-Williams is another name to know. Dixon-Williams has four PBUs, including an interception, and is second on the team with 59 total tackles.

Special Teams: Sophomore Noe Ruelas is the Huskies' place kicker. He's a perfect 16-of-16 on PATs this season, and he's 7-of-8 on field goals. Ruelas has quite the leg, as he's drilled a 54-yarder this season. His lone miss was beyond 40. Redshirt sophomore George Caratan is UConn's punter. He's averaging 40.64 yards per boot, which is 69th nationally. Rosa returns both kicks and punts for the Huskies. He's averaging 18.5 yards per kickoff return and 5.8 yards per punt return.

NUMBERS TO KNOW​

-2 — UConn's turnover margin this season. The Huskies have created 11 takeaways but given the ball away 13 times. To put their 13 giveaways into perspective, only two ACC teams have committed more turnovers in 2022 (Miami and Virginia).

45.71% — conversion rate of the Huskies' opponents on third down this season, which has them tied for 117th nationally in that defensive category.

88 — tackles made by UConn linebacker Jackson Mitchell this year, a total that is second in the country right now.

ESPN FPI​

The database gives BC a 69.2% chance of beating UConn in Week 9.

OUTLOOK​

BC can't afford a loss in East Hartford. It can't really be close, either. Not only are the Eagles undefeated against UConn, but they also haven't allowed more than 16 points to the Huskies in single-game program history. Head coach Jeff Hafley has extended BC's recruiting footprint across the country, however, recruiting in the Eagles' backyard, AKA throughout New England, is still important. Dropping a game, or cutting it close, versus a UConn program that's been hovering at the bottom of the FBS much of the last decade would be a significant setback in that department.
Both BC and UConn are ravaged by injuries this season. Luckily for the Eagles, UConn is thin on its defensive line, and the talent of its offensive skill players—especially star wideout Zay Flowers—should be enough to overwhelm the Huskies. The spread remains around a touchdown, but BC could easily double that Saturday afternoon.
That's the Eagles' best hope, anyway.

Wake Forest BB

I'm a big Forbes fan and I've acknowledged that his transfer class for 2021-22 was Mount Rushmore levels with Williams coming from Oklahoma being ACC POY and LaRavia from Indiana State being 2nd team All-ACC and an eventual 1st rounder.

In their "secret scrimmage" they beat The OSU by 10 with a starting squad that includes grad transfer from Florida, a junior transfer from Delaware and another junior transfer from Kansas State. The moral of the story is WF will be competitive again as they reloaded with transfers. Here is the kicker ... none of these guys got any real NIL $$$s. They are all guys who understood they were not getting minutes at whatever schools they were at and wanted the opportunity to start in arguably the best conference in America and play for a coach who can get you to the next level.

You absolutely need to build based on recruiting, but teams like WF are playing the portal game ccorrectly. For BC, Post and TJ are good parallels.

I think the same thing holds for CFB ... there is no reason why BC can't pull olinemen when they are in the market and can tell a guy he is basically going to be the starting RT (as an example).

Bob Chesney

As some of you may know, this is a name to watch for the future. Long time New England guy who turned around Salve Regina at D3, turned Assumption into a national power at D2, and now has Holy Cross in the Top 10 at the FCS level.

How do you all feel about him as a Haf replacement down the road? Also, when/where does Chesney make the FBS jump? Can't imagine he'd be eager to go the UMass route, but if UConn could build themselves up a bit he may go there. Would a MAC school take a shot on a New England guy? Worth noting is the fact that UMass/UConn/Temple all have Yr1 HCs right now

What Did UConn HC Jim Mora Say About BC?

What Did UConn HC Jim Mora Say About BC?​

Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom)
Publisher

Despite a slew of its own injuries, UConn is coming off its bye week at an encouraging 3-5 in the first year of the Jim Mora era.

To put that in perspective, the Huskies had won just four total games between 2018 and 2021, granted they didn't play the 2020 season because of COVID-19. The point is, while the bar is low, UConn is headed in the right direction under Mora.

It's still a work in progress, however, as demonstrated by UConn's performance against Power Five competition this year. Earlier this season, the Huskies lost to Syracuse, Michigan and North Carolina State by a combined score of 148-24.

But those three teams are currently in the AP Top 25. At 2-5, BC is far from that territory.

Here's what Mora said about BC in his weekly presser ahead of the teams' Week 9 matchup.

Introductory Statement​

"This is a huge challenge for us. I know what BC’s record is. But I also know what the tape tells me. And, in studying these guys offensively, defensively and special teams-wise, it’s a good football team.

"Offensively, their run numbers aren’t great. But you look at the Louisville game, and they got after Louisville in the run. And so they’re certainly capable. Their quarterback is touted as one of the best quarterbacks in the country. He’s big, he’s strong, he’s physical. They’re using him more in the run game now. He can make every throw on the field. And then he’s got receivers to throw to.

"Certainly Zay is a guy you have to pay attention to. You can’t put your—you’re not going to stop the kid. You can slow him down. You’re not going to stop him. He’s that good. We have a ton of respect for him.

"BC defensively is probably as physical a team as we’ll face. Maybe not quite as physical as Michigan but right there. And that’s saying a lot. Because that’s one of the most physical fronts in football. So they’re very impressive there. They’ve got corners that can cover. They play a really nice scheme. They keep the ball in front of them. They hustle to the ball. They tackle. And then, special teams-wise, any time you got the returners that they’ve got back there, you’re holding your breath a little bit when you kick it to them.

"I’ve been told that this school has never beat BC. And I’ve been told that it’s somewhat of a rivalry, at least from our standpoint. So I’ll be interested to see how that is. It’s 'Homecoming.' It’d be nice to see some people back on campus and hopefully in the Rent (Pratt & Whitney Stadium at Rentschler Field). We’re anticipating a good environment there. I’m sure BC will travel well. So it’s one of those games you always look forward to."

Q: What makes Flowers such a good receiver?​

"Speed, quickness, change of direction. The ability to get off a bump and run. The ability to avoid hits. People try to jam him. They try to get hands on him, but he’s so nifty as he’s running up the field or across the field or down the field. He’s just hard to get. I’ve watched every game that they’ve played, and I haven’t seen him take a hit. He has amazing body control, and he’s got confidence. He reminds me of Isaac Bruce. When you watch Zay play, you’re watching a young Isaac Bruce. That’s what you’re watching. The same type of movement skills and the same type of route running ability and the same elusiveness. Ike rarely took a hit, either. So he stays healthy."

Q: What’s your overall assessment of your defensive line? Because BC’s offensive line has been disrupted all year. They haven’t started the same group except for two games.​

"We’re thin. We don’t have a ton of depth. But we play hard. And it’s important to these guys. And they’re learning to play with better pad level. And they’re playing more violent. And they’re gaining confidence in what they’re doing. And they care. It’s a good, solid group that will get better and better with time and with more depth or younger guys getting experience that creates more depth."

Seven Games and Six Different O-Line Combos In, BC Used to Change Up Front

Seven Games and Six Different O-Line Combos In, BC Used to Change Up Front​

Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom)
Publisher

As unfortunate as it may be, it's the new normal for Boston College: Every week is a game of musical chairs for the Eagles' offensive line.

BC has played seven games this season, and it has had six different O-Line combinations in the process. The latest included a pair of players who began last season as defensive linemen and third who is a former preferred walk-on.

"We're pretty used to it at this point, unfortunately," Eagles right tackle Jack Conley said Tuesday, via BC Athletics. "But it's next guy up. We believe in everyone in our room. Everyone in our room can play. They're here for a reason.

"So, step up and play. Whatever spot you're at, you better know it. And you better get in and execute."

A quick refresher...​

Week 1 vs. Rutgers: LT Ozzy Trapilo, LG Finn Dirstine, C Drew Kendall, RG Jack Conley, RT Kevin Cline (Combo 1)
Week 2 at Virginia Tech: LT Jack Conley, LG Finn Dirstine, C Drew Kendall, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Kevin Cline (Combo 2)
Week 3 vs. Maine: LT Nick Thomas, LG Finn Dirstine, C Drew Kendall, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Jack Conley (Combo 3)
Week 4 at Florida State: LT Ozzy Trapilo, LG Finn Dirstine, C Drew Kendall, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Jack Conley (Combo 4)
Week 5 vs. Louisville: LT Ozzy Trapilo, LG Jackson Ness, C Drew Kendall, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Jack Conley (Combo 5)
Week 6 vs. Clemson: LT Ozzy Trapilo, LG Jackson Ness, C Drew Kendall, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Jack Conley (Combo 5*)
Week 8 at Wake Forest: LT Ozzy Trapilo, LG Nick Thomas, C Jackson Ness, RG Dwayne Allick, RT Jack Conley (Combo 6)
*Week 5 and 6 is the only time so far this season BC has started consecutive weeks with the same five up front.

BC's O-Line injury report...​

— RG Christian Mahogany tore his ACL in late spring and is expected to miss the whole season
— LT Ozzy Trapilo injured his knee against Rutgers and missed two games but has since returned
— RT Kevin Cline tore his ACL at Virginia Tech and is out for the season
— LG Finn Dirstine suffered a season-ending shoulder injury ahead of the Louisville game
— C Drew Kendall broke his wrist against Clemson and could return later this season

'The best ability is availability'​

Conley is the lone remaining Week 1 starter who has yet to miss time this season. The redshirt junior has had a rough go of it in 2022, though—and that's after a bad 2021 campaign, during which he filled in for former Eagles left tackle Tyler Vrabel and gave up 22 pressures and seven sacks in 133 pass blocking snaps, according to Pro Football Focus. Of the seven Eagles with 100 or more pass blocking snaps this season, Conley is sixth with a PFF pass blocking grade of 50.4. Conley's 24 pressures allowed are 10 more than any other BC player this year, per PFF.

As much as he's struggled at times, however, Conley's durability has stuck out.

“He’s been the constant," Hafley said Tuesday. "We wanted to play him at guard, and then we obviously had to move him back to tackle. He was banged up in that last game, but he fought through it, and we needed him to. He’s had some ups and downs. But, just talking to him yesterday, he’s positive. He’s going to keep working.

"You need guys like that."

The 6-foot-7, 316-pound Conley has started games at right guard, right tackle and left tackle this season. His 438 snaps are the most of any Eagles offensive player, per PFF.

"It’s tough," Conley said. "We’ve lost a lot of guys, but I guess the best ability is availability. I pride myself on, week in and week out, playing."

Conley said this week that the communication doesn't really change when the combinations change because the center always makes the calls and all the other O-Linemen echo those calls.

But, at Wake Forest last week, the Eagles had a new center. Since Kendall was still out with a broken wrist that he suffered against Clemson two weeks prior, Ness moved to the middle of the trenches. Even though Ness spent time at center during fall camp when Kendall was sidelined, it was the former D-Lineman's first start at the position. As a result, there were growing pains, most notably a handful of procedural penalties—the Eagles had four false starts in their 43-15 loss to Wake.

Pass protection will be easier for BC's O-Line if it can be more consistent blocking in the run game—BC is last in the FBS in rushing yards per game (67.57). That's showed in the Eagles' two wins, both of which have seen BC rush for more than 100 yards and throw for north of 300 yards.

"We gotta control what we can control," Conley said. "Fire off the ball, have good tight hands. It all starts with communication. Listen to the center, listen to the MIKE IDs. Going off that, and being as consistent as we can be with our blocks."

Facing a UConn team that ranks 84th in rushing defense (156.0 yards per game allowed) presents a suitable opportunity for BC to get back on track in that department—regardless of which O-Line combination we see in East Hartford Saturday.
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No. 13 Demon Deacons Pull Away From BC in Topsy-Turvy Game

No. 13 Demon Deacons Pull Away From BC in Topsy-Turvy Game​

Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom)
Publisher

Punter Danny Longman was Boston College's leading rusher at the end of the first half of Saturday evening's game at No. 13 Wake Forest. Right tackle Jack Conley had created the team's only turnover.

Yet, somehow, BC—despite being down, 21-9, at intermission—was outgaining the Demon Deacons in total yards, 202-197, through two quarters.

That's just a snapshot of how bizarre the Atlantic Division bout was.

At times, BC's bottom-ranked offense looked explosive, and the Eagles even had the ball near midfield down two scores late in the third quarter, but that's as close they'd get to matching pace with Wake's high-octane yet slow-mesh offense that netted 428 yards of offense in a 43-15 victory at Truist Field in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

"We couldn't get it to one possession," BC head coach Jeff Hafley said. "It stayed at two possessions for a while, and then it got away from us."

Once again, BC (2-5, 1-4 ACC) had a new O-Line combination. It was the team's sixth different lineup in the trenches. Center Drew Kendall was out with a broken wrist, so Jackson Ness—who had started the previous two games at left guard—slotted in there. Former preferred walk-on Nick Thomas—who filled in for Ozzy Trapilo at left tackle earlier this season—came in at left guard.

Predictably, it was tough sledding for those two, and really the whole Eagles O-Line. Procedural penalties, some caused by mistime snaps, played a role in BC piling up 11 penalties for 104 penalty yards.

The first of the Eagles' four false start penalties set them back in the red zone on a drive that completely stalled after Jurkovec piloted the offense to the 5-yard line of Wake (6-1, 2-1). BC entered the week 103rd in red zone touchdown percentage (52.94%) and failed to improve on that clip on that series, which did chew 5:30 of clock but also burned two timeouts because of what Hafley called "miscommunication."

Two incompletions, a run for loss and the aforementioned false start forced Hafley to trot out Connor Lytton for a 29-yard field goal.

"We gotta score a touchdown there," Hafley said. "We're playing the No. 13 team in the country that scores 41 points a game. You get down to the 5, and you have to score touchdowns to win the game."

Deacons quarterback Sam Hartman started 1-of-4 for -1 yards. Then he completed 15 of his next 17 passes, taking whatever the Eagles' zone defense gave him. BC's game plan was to make Hartman drive the length of the field, and he accepted that challenge head on. Of Wake's six touchdown drives, four went at least 65 yards.

The first of those saw Hartman pick on BC cornerbacks Amari Jackson and Elijah Jones. Hartman moved the chains on 4th-and-3 with a completion to Donovan Greene. Later, he found Jahmal Banks with a back shoulder throw for a 15-yard score.

In almost no time, the Deacons went up, 14-3, thanks a shanked Longman punt that traveled only 15 yards. The botched special teams play gifted Wake great field position, which Hartman—who threw for 313 yards, five scores and one pick—eventually converted into a 12-yard touchdown strike to Taylor Morin.

BC's lone touchdown of the first half took so many twists and turns it was practically unbelievable. It featured a Longman fake punt. He dashed 24 yards, giving the Eagles a fresh set of downs in the process. Then Hafley decided to roll the dice on 4th-and-11 from the Wake 37, and, even though Jurkovec was strip sacked, Conley jarred the ball loose from Demon Deacons sophomore D-Lineman Jasheen Davis. Ness recovered, rewarding BC with yet another fresh set of downs.

After all that, Flowers reeled in his fourth 50-plus-yard reception of the season, a 61-yard touchdown catch.

"It was just a 1-on-1, and I pride myself on winning 1-on-1 matchups, especially if he's off, and it's a deep ball," Flowers said postgame. "So it's just win my route and get in the end zone to help my team stay in the game."

Fittingly, the abnormal series was capped with a blocked PAT.

While BC has Jurkovec and Flowers, Wake has Hartman and AT Perry. The Deacons' duo hooked up three times on the ensuing drive, tying it off with a 13-yard touchdown that put Wake ahead, 21-9.

BC forced a Deacons punt on their first drive of the second half. But that's the last time their first-team offense had to call on punter Ivan Mora. Three of Wake's next four series ended with touchdowns.

The first was made by possible by a backbreaking, 3rd-and-25 conversion, courtesy of Hartman and Morin. A roughing the passer penalty on BC defensive tackle Cam Horsley vaulted Wake into the red zone. From there, Hartman went back to Morin for a four-yard score.

Similar to its first touchdown drive, BC's second was wonky. It began with a 27-yard Taji Johnson kickoff return. After back-to-back false start penalties, Jurkovec located Flowers for a 23-yard reception on 3rd-and-15. A 16-yard completion to true freshman wideout Joe Griffin and a 14-yard rush by running back Pat Garwo III slingshotted the Eagles into goal-to-go territory.

Then, on 3rd-and-Goal, Jurkovec scrambled for a touchdown, however, BC's two-point conversion was no good, as Jurkovec slipped on a quarterback draw.

Redshirt freshman free safety Cole Batson made the biggest play of his young career on the subsequent Wake drive. He dove to seal a tip-drill interception, giving BC the ball back around midfield.

Scoring points off turnovers has been a crippling issue for the Eagles all season—they came into Saturday with zero points off six takeaways—and that problem persisted when BC needed to capitalize most.

Down, 28-15, with under four minutes left in the third quarter, Jurkovec missed Garwo on a second down swing pass. When facing a 4th-and-6 from the Eagles' own 46-yard line, Hafley brought out the punt team.

Wake responded with a 10-play, 88-yard touchdown drive that proved to be the nail in BC's coffin. Hartman tied it off with a two-yard rushing score and then dialed up a two-point conversion for Ke'Shawn Williams.

The Deacons scored once more before Hafley and Wake head coach Dave Clawson started pulling offensive starters. BC's defense was worn down at that point.

Wake running back Quinton Cooley shook out of a leg tackle for a first down, Hartman scrambled for a first down on a 3rd-and-10 and, eventually, Banks—despite defensive pass interference—came down with a 16-yard touchdown catch on a 3rd-and-13.

It was the fifth time this season backup BC quarterback Emmett Morehead has seen action. That's telling, considering that, in four of those games, the Eagles were getting blown out.

Morehead's reps are about building for the future. There are a bunch of BC veterans that still believe they can turn around the current season, though.

Postgame, defensive end Marcus Valdez said do-it-all defensive back Jason Maitre conveyed that very message to the team. Hafley called Maitre's speech "impressive"—so much so Hafley pointed out he almost didn't have to address the team himself.

"We haven't packed it in," Valdez said. "Most teams probably would pack it in. But I mean we're fighting every day. Guys are playing injured and giving their all for this team, even though it's not looking good right now.

"We're gonna keep going."

Patriots disaster

Quite evident that Belichick & Co. took Brady's hometown discounts for granted. This franchise had absolutely no succession plan in place. 3 years removed from Brady and it's a rotation of turnover machines at QB.

Also, more terrible playcalling from Matty P. It's like we threw the name of a bunch of special needs folks into a hat in order to choose our OC. No creativity and completely predictable. Also completely repetitive. Ten million checkdowns to Rhanondre Stevenson. Another run up the middle on 3rd and 11 that goes for nothing. Pretty sure toss crack is the only run play they're capable of executing well.

Buy hey, thank God we have the heir apparent to Bill on the staff though, one Steve Belichick. I knew we were golden after Stevey Boy's defense gave up 7 touchdowns in 7 possessions to Buffalo.

Oh and also Jake Bailey looks like Danny Longman shanking punts and getting touchbacks instead of pins.

This team is on the precipice of falling 3 behind NYJ and losing their season
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