ADVERTISEMENT

Designing BC's Schedule if they were Independent

In the spirit of bye week, I decided to undertake a theoretical project and scheme up what BC's perfect schedule would look like if they were an independent like they once were for so long. A few parameters to bear in mind:

1. I'm looking at this over the course of a 5 year span, because it order to schedule realistically, you need to take into account home-and-homes as well as 2 for 1s.

2. In this theoretical model, BC will be playing in Week 0 every week in order to schedule more P5 opponents. As CFB moves towards 9 game conference seasons, this allows us to theoretically schedule about 4-6 P5s (Including Notre Dame) per year over the course of 14 available weeks. I think this is a realistic goal for BC, especially if we're still counting the future PAC as P5.

Playing 5 12 game seasons, we have 60 total games to fill up. Without further ado, let's get to it.

  • 5 games vs Northeast FCS (Non Holy Cross)
Rationale: Your 5 FCS games to sell some tickets and get some wins. Honestly, dodge HC as long as Chesney is there. TOTAL: 5 games vs FCS

  • 5 games vs UMass (3 home, 2 away)
  • 5 games vs UConn (3 home, 2 away)
  • 5 games vs Army (3 home, 2 away)
  • 3 games vs Notre Dame (1 home, 2 away)
Rationale: Filling your schedule with fellow independents seems inevitable. UMass, UConn, and Army may agree to a 3/2 split, which helps fill up home games and gets you some theoretical wins. Notre Dame won't schedule you every year, but a 2/1 against such a presitgious school would be a great opportunity. TOTAL: 18 games vs independents

  • 4 games vs Syracuse (2 home, 2 away)
  • 3 games vs Penn State (1 home, 2 away)
  • 2 games vs Pitt (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs West Virginia (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Cincinatti (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Rutgers (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Maryland (1 home, 1 away)
Rationale: These are all regional P5 opponents that, for the most part, are adjacent to BC in terms of success. Penn State gives you that elite opponent that excites the fan base and provides you the platform for national recognition, but you'll probably have to go 2/1. The ACC's 8 game conference structure gives BC 4 opportunities to play 'Cuse, but Pitt will be busy playing games against WVU in their noncon, who will be a nice addition themselves from the old Big East. Cincinatti could present an opportunity for some exciting, quality wins for BC. Rutgers and Maryland are road games BC fans can get to and teams BC can beat. The overall split here is realistic, with a healthy dosage of Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12 opponents. TOTAL: 17 games against regional P5s.

  • 2 games vs Stanford (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Cal (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Oregon State (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Missouri (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games vs Virginia (1 home, 1 away)
Rationale: With BC yet to play teams from the PAC and SEC, I wanted to get them an opponent from every conference. The PAC will likely be scrambling to fill schedule spots in the future, so here's an opportunity to get credit for P5 wins against 3 of the more beatable teams out there. Stanford and Cal in particular are opportunities to play in California in front of alumni and recruits against academic schools like BC is. Virginia is another academic school BC can beat, and one who needs to fill 4 noncon spots. As for Mizzou, they're one of few SEC teams who may actually do a home-and-home with you. TOTAL: 10 games against other P5s.

  • 2 games against SMU (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games against North Texas (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games against FIU (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games against USF (1 home, 1 away)
  • 2 games against Temple (1 home, 1 away)
Rationale: BC rounds out the slate with some G5 schools. I'd imagine ost of these schools can match BC's payout, and these games give BC the opportunity to play in talent-rich states, and hopefully pick up some wins. Temple makes sense as a regional game. TOTAL: 10 games against other G5s

TOTALS:


  • 8 games vs ACC
  • 7 games vs Big 10
  • 6 games vs PAC
  • 4 games vs Big 12
  • 3 games vs Notre Dame
  • 2 games vs SEC
  • 25 games vs G5/G5 Indy
  • 5 games vs FCS
  • 32 home games
  • 28 road games

Flowers in Full Bloom Amid Record-Breaking Senior Season

Flowers in Full Bloom Amid Record-Breaking Senior Season​


Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom)
Publisher

Ahead of last week's game between Boston College and Clemson, Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney said that figuring out where BC is going to line up wide receiver Zay Flowers is like playing a game of "Where's Waldo?"

At times throughout Flowers' Eagles career, the dynamic playmaker has been underutilized. The back half of his freshman season, his touches were practically limited to jet sweeps and flanker screens. Last year, he was BC's top Z receiver but then-offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti Jr. hardly moved Flowers around for anything more. He had just seven carries, and because of BC's struggles to hit the deep ball—a backbone of its offense in 2020—Flowers' target total dropped from 91 to 82, despite playing one more game, in 2021.

This offseason, Flowers had his choice of six-figure offers from NIL companies, each that would have required him to enter the portal and transfer to a specific school. But Flowers—one of 14 children in a single-parent household—prioritized his loyalty to BC over what he called "life-changing" money in Pete Thamel's May ESPN story.
First-year Eagles OC John McNulty made a promise to get Flowers the ball early and often in 2022, and he has made good on his word.

Flowers' skill set is being maximized with not just jet sweeps but also pop passes, double passes, a variety of screens and pretty much every pattern in the intermediate and deep passing route tree. Although BC's offense has been far from pretty this season, six games in, Flowers is in full bloom.

"I don’t know if I’ve seen anybody right now that’s as good as him, and I mean that," third-year Eagles head coach Jeff Hafley said last week. "If he can continue to do that, he has to be in consideration to be the top wide receiver in the country this year."

As far as the ACC goes, Flowers is first in receptions (42), first in receiving yards (556) and tied for first in receiving touchdowns (five) this season. The senior's 63 targets are the 12th most in the the country, according to Pro Football Focus. No other ACC wide receiver has more than 60 this season.

Of Flowers' 63 targets, 40 of them have come within 0-9 yards or behind the line of scrimmage. That's partly because BC's injury-riddled and inexperienced offensive line hasn't been able to give quarterback Phil Jurkovec much time to throw. But it's also because Flowers is balletic in space. He has four missed tackles forced in that 0-9 yard range or behind the LOS, resulting in 14 first downs on those catches, per PFF.

Additionally, he leads the ACC with four receptions of 40-plus yards. That's after entering 2022 as one of two FBS players who logged at least six such receptions in both 2021 and 2020 (the other was Wake Forest's Jaquarii Roberson).

Flowers scored touchdowns of 57 and 69 yards in BC's Week 5 win over Louisville. The first featured a leaping reception in double coverage that Jurkovec deemed Flowers' best catch in the tandem's three years together. The second saw Flowers rack up yards after the catch en route to the end zone.

"He's so dynamic and so quick, yet he's a threat down the field as well," McNulty said, when describing Flowers in spring ball. "Usually, those are the bigger guys that can do the stuff down the field, and the little guys can do the stuff in the slot.

"Well, this guy is doing both."

McNulty admitted that Flowers—who he said effortlessly smiles more than he sweats in conditioning drills—is not anyone like he's coached in NFL. And he was a wide receivers coach with the Arizona Cardinals when they had Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin.

McNulty said before the start of the season that it was his goal to help Flowers leave BC as the school's all-time leader in receiving yards, receptions and receiving touchdowns. In McNulty's eyes, the more Flowers gets the ball, the better the Eagles will play.

At midseason, Flowers is on pace to break at least two of the three program records. After all, he needed 70 receptions, 822 receiving yards and 12 touchdown grabs to go out on top of the Eagles' leaderboard in all three of those categories.

"I like everything they’re doing with me," Flowers said last week. "I feel like Coach McNulty puts me in the best positions—not only me—he’s putting everybody in the best positions to be successful. I feel like he’s doing a good job with moving us around."

There's no doubt Flowers breathes life into an offense that's scored 14 points or fewer in each of its three ACC losses. And he certainly makes everyone around him better, however, he does command a disproportional target share. His 63 targets are 39 more than any other Eagle this season, per PFF. Hafley has been asked about that distribution a couple times this season, including this week during the bye.

"I'd like to see it evened out a little bit," Hafley said. "But I think Zay deserves to catch the football and get the ball in his hands as much as he can."

Hafley likes the way his new offensive staff has used creativity to get Flowers involved. He credits Flowers for his own work ethic but also cites the impact of wide receivers coach Darrell Wyatt, a three-decade-plus veteran assistant who has helped the Fort Lauderdale, Florida, native become a complete wideout.

Flowers talked about Wyatt emphasizing the importance of "meeting the ball in the air." Contested catches are something that Wyatt preaches, Flowers said, and, according to PFF, Flowers has three of them in 2022.

"I think that's what the next level is going to look at the most," Hafley said. "I'm not calling Zay small, but he's not this giant wideout. But he's playing bigger than he is by going up and taking the ball away from bigger DBs.

"It's very hard to tackle him—not only [because] you've gotta get your hands on him, but he plays stronger than his size."

ESPN currently ranks Flowers the 43rd overall prospect, and the sixth wide receiver, in the 2023 NFL Draft. He's primed to be BC's first wideout drafted since 1987, and, at this rate, he could even go in the first round.

Just as he's been underutilized throughout parts of his four-year BC career, he's also been overlooked on a national level. That, of course, is tied to the Eagles' inability to break through, in terms of win-loss record.

Flowers' usage in 2022 is nipping that trend in the bud.

"You’ve gotta find No. 4," Swinney said last week. "I mean, he’s as good of a player as there is in college football."

By the time May rolls around, Flowers' NFL career will be taking root.

He won't be hard to find anymore.

BC Campus , big game day atmosphere, students and Gridiron Club.

As most of you know I’m not a BC grad., just a passionate lifelong BC fan who is lucky enough to live in Chestnut Hill West Roxbury within 3 miles of BC ‘s beautiful, idyllic campus.
Went to first football game this year last night . Started in Connell center , wow beautiful and alive with sports and students . The gridiron club tailgate was also inside of Connell center in case of weather , or cold .
The club , members and everyone there was warm , friendly , kind and it was a great time .
I highly, very highly recommend the Gridiron Club and love Don T. Class of 1970 .
The stadium was rocking , the student section was packed and it’s was a beautiful beautiful all around night .
The better team won , we had so many chances but that’s another thread .
I sat in sec B last row 34 I think. I was next to 45 year plus season tickets holders from Beverly and BC class of 1985 Hockey player Mike Santos . Great guy , tremendous BC guy and great career in pro Hockey management.
Finally Clemson fans are awesome , passionate , knowledgeable and love to have a great time .
They all loved , loved the BC gameday experience and campus .
#ForBoston
Login to view embedded media
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT