Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Well, duh . . .

Grobe beats out Schiano for AP coaching honor


NEW YORK -- Jim Grobe held Wake Forest together after a couple of potentially devastating injuries, refused to let his players feel sorry for themselves and turned the perennially downtrodden Demon Deacons into champions.

AP Coach of Year voting
Coach Votes
Jim Grobe, Wake Forest 39
Greg Schiano, Rutgers 12
Bob Stoops, Oklahoma 6
Jim Tressel, Ohio State 3
Houston Nutt, Arkansas 2
Bret Bielema, Wisconsin 1
Chris Petersen, Boise State 1
Bobby Petrino, Louisville 1

For orchestrating one of the most surprising turnarounds in college football and the best season in Wake Forest's 105-year football history, Grobe was honored as The Associated Press Coach of the Year on Wednesday.

"I can't put into words how satisfying it's been," Grobe said in a recent phone interview. "It's just now that we're starting to appreciate what we've done and to enjoy it a little bit."

In his sixth season at Wake Forest, Grobe took the Demon Deacons (11-2) from worst to first in the Atlantic Coast Conference without their starting quarterback and top tailback. Wake Forest set a school record for victories and won the ACC for the first time in 36 years.

"This is one football team that appreciates the opportunity to go to a bowl game and especially appreciates the opportunity to play in the Orange Bowl," Grobe said.

The 54-year-old Grobe beat out a strong group of contenders for coach of the year, receiving 39 of 65 votes from the AP Top 25 voters.

Rutgers coach Greg Schiano, who took the once-laughable Scarlet Knights within a victory of the Bowl Championship Series, finished second with 12 votes.

Oklahoma's Bob Stoops was third with six votes. Ohio State's Jim Tressel received three votes. Arkansas' Houston Nutt got two votes. Boise State's Chris Petersen, Louisville's Bobby Petrino and first-year Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema each received one vote.

Any of those would have been worthy winners, but no coach got more out of his team than Grobe.

"The best thing he did this year was convincing us to believe in our program and to believe in him and the rest of his coaches," linebacker Aaron Curry said. "He convinced us to believe in our system and the things we were going to do."

The Demon Deacons were coming off three straight losing seasons, but had one of the most experienced rosters in the ACC with 18 returning starters.

"I thought we were going to be a better football team," Grobe said. "In fact, I thought we had potential to be a pretty good football team."

Great seasons, however, rarely start the way this one began for the Deacons.

In the opener against Syracuse, quarterback Ben Mauck broke his arm and was lost for the season. Two weeks later, tailback Micah Andrews injured his knee and was done for the year.

"The first thing you worry about is the mentality of your football team when you lose really good players, especially with season-ending injuries," Grobe said. "Our focus was to try and not change our approach each week and the way we talked to the players.

"Having a little bit more of a mature football team than we've had in the past and having a coaching staff that's been together for a while, we didn't dwell on the negatives very long. We were forward-thinking pretty quick."

While tending to the team's state of mind, Grobe and his staff were also revamping the offense. Under Grobe, Wake Forest has been the best rushing team in the ACC. Without its two best runners, the focus shifted for the Deacons.

They scrapped the spread-option built around Mauck's running and built a simpler plan around redshirt freshman Riley Skinner. Without Andrews, Grobe shifted receiver Kenneth Moore to running back and got other receivers involved in the running game.

"We kind of adopted a little bit of an old-school mentality -- and we typically try to do that anyway -- but I think even more so we began to emphasize the importance of taking care of the football," Grobe said.

Wake Forest was outgained this season 312 yards per game to 301, but was plus-14 in turnover differential, had a strong kicking game and played tough red-zone defense.

The Demon Deacons became the first ACC team to ever go 6-0 on the road and clinched their first Bowl Championship Series berth with a 9-6 victory over Georgia Tech in the ACC title game.

"We had a team that was focused on trying to win football games, and not coming out of the game worried about their stats," Grobe said.

Grobe, who had a winning record in his first two seasons at Wake Forest, is a hot commodity again and being mentioned as a possible candidate for high-profile jobs.

"I have no idea what the future holds," he said, "but I could not be happier than I am at Wake Forest right now."

Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Well, son of a gun . . .

Before it happened, I would have found this even more unlikely than Wake winning the ACC Championship:

http://www.wfu.edu/wowf/

Bowl tickets are hot tickets

Wake Forest has sold nearly all of its ticket allotment to the FedEx Orange Bowl. By mid-day Wednesday, only about 500 tickets were left out of the 17,500 allotted.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Deaconball Victorious! Wake 9, Georgia Tech 6

Wake Forest football has completely undermined my purpose in keeping this blog, and I couldn't be happier.

This blog was supposed to be about living and dying with a team, a team that gave its fans no reason to expect great things.

Then this team went out and accomplished greater things than any Wake team before it.

Wake Forest is ACC champion. In football. In the era of expansion, the era that was supposed to make the ACC a football powerhouse, the era that was supposed to be dominated by Florida State, Miami, Virginia Tech.

Wake Forest is playing in a BCS bowl, the day after New Year's. For me, the New Year's bowls have always been a last gasp of college football, a chance to watch games as a dispassionate fan, enjoying the game for the sake of the game - until this year.

My brother said yesterday that "like the plays of Shakespeare, you can tease out the ramifications of this for a long, long time." I still can't wrap my mind around everything this means.

Once you finish grappling with the improbability of "little ol' Wake Forest" winning the conference championship - for the first time in my lifetime of following the Deacs - you come up against the fact that they won it without their starting quarterback and starting tailback, with their star linebacker playing on a bum ankle, with their third and fourth string tailbacks going out during the championship game with injuries.

They won it with a redshirt freshman that nobody wanted filling in at quarterback and losing only two games, throwing only four interceptions the entire season, and making big plays when Wake absolutely needed them.

It's the best team in Wake history, and the best team to root for that a fan could have. ABC flashed a graphic during the game showing the average graduation rate for Division I football programs - 58% - and the graduation rate for Wake Forest - 96%.

If you're looking for unnaturally talented athletes assured of making ridiculous amounts of money in the NFL, if that's the aspect of college football that brings you joy, don't bother watching Wake Forest.

But if you're looking for a team that plays with heart and brains and guts, a team that plays together, a team that plays for each other, then be sure to tune in to the Orange Bowl on January 2 and keep an eye on the Old Gold and Black.

I could go on about this until blogspot ran out of memory space. I could go on until I reached the end of the Internet. I can't say enough good things about this team, these players, these coaches, this incredible year. Yet I'm still somehow at a loss for words.

Go Deacs.

Friday, December 01, 2006

New Wake Forest video

Sent to me by my Wake-employed friend Patrick:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzNjhR45bN8

Go Deacs.