Wednesday, November 14, 2007

SF Chronicle: Tedford throws a flag for piling on

Rusty Simmons

Without being asked to name a starting a quarterback for Saturday's game at Washington, Cal coach Jeff Tedford made his choice very clear:  "It's really unfair to pile on a college quarterback who is competing the way Nate (Longshore) is competing and who has done so much for us," Tedford said Tuesday. "I thought it was very big of Nate to shoulder the responsibility for the (USC) loss, but in no way, shape or form was it all on his shoulders."  Longshore was 13-for-29 for 199 yards and a 20-yard touchdown pass, but he also threw two second-half interceptions and fumbled a center exchange in the 24-17 loss to USC. After the game, Longshore pointed the finger at himself.  "I take the responsibility on myself," Longshore said. "I need to play better down the stretch to give us a chance to win. It's a culmination of this late season. I haven't been playing well enough for us to win.

"That's what it comes down to, and I'll be the first to say it."  In Cal's 5-0 start, Longshore completed 63.8 percent of his passes for 1,137 yards and seven touchdowns to two interceptions. Since spraining his right ankle in the 31-24 win at Oregon on Sept. 29 and missing the ensuing loss to Oregon State, Longshore has completed 57.3 percent of his passes for 919 yards and five touchdowns to eight interceptions as the Bears have gone 1-3. "I don't think he can escape the criticism," Tedford said. "I'm sure out there on campus and in public, he hears things. I don't think there are any ways around it. Part of that comes with the territory.  "In the good times, there is a lot of praise that comes with that position, and in the bad times, there is a lot of criticism ... but that doesn't make it right to pile on a college quarterback who isn't getting paid a million dollars to play this game. He's a college athlete who goes to school and is doing everything right and lays it on the line every week."

It's easy to forget that Longshore led Cal to a 10-3 record last season, throwing for 3,021 yards and 24 touchdowns. "The obvious thing to do is to pile on the quarterback," Tedford said. "Nobody sees missed gap responsibilities or missed blocking assignments, but it's very evident to the eye what the quarterback does. "Nate has done a lot of really good things for us. ... He did a lot of great things against a great USC defense and in very tough weather conditions."

Longshore's teammates have been nothing but supportive through his struggles. "We're definitely rallying around him and trying to pick him up," outside linebacker Anthony Felder said. "He wants to take the responsibility for the loss, because he feels like it's his burden to bear as the quarterback. It's our job to let him know that he's not out there by himself."

Best update: Freshman tailback Jahvid Best, who injured his hip in the third quarter against USC and didn't return, has been ruled out for Saturday's game, Tedford said. Cal's medical staff still is evaluating the injury. "We want to make sure it's diagnosed properly, so we're going to get a couple of opinions and see the extent of the injury," Tedford said.

 

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

""In the good times, there is a lot of praise that comes with that position, and in the bad times, there is a lot of criticism ... but that doesn't make it right to pile on a college quarterback who isn't getting paid a million dollars to play this game. He's a college athlete who goes to school and is doing everything right and lays it on the line every week.""

That's a laughable statement. He's not getting paid a million dollars, but he's getting a national stage on which to audition for those million dollar jobs. Longshore won't bench himself because he probably realizes he won't win the job back. If he can't win the job back, he can kiss all those NFL millions goodbye. Remember, after the Oregon game Longshore's name was coming up as one of the top college quarterbacks. Now he is going to need to ensure that he comes back for a senior year if he wants to go to the NFL. He's got to hold onto that starting job tight.

I'm so tired of hearing that college football players are really just students who happen to play football. While that may be true for the majority of them, the skill players (the QB in particular) in a BCS conference have higher sights. Make the argument about not piling onto women's field hockey players or men's water polo...there's no million dollar signing bonus they are all chasing. But don't pretend that football players are the same.

Anonymous said...

the only thing laughable is your response. I'm sorry but what team do you coach, or what team do you scout for. Your a hater, and i would appreciate it if you go to hell.

Anonymous said...

Nice ad hominem attack. Learn to punctuate before you flame me, you shmuck.

Anonymous said...

nice comeback. Learn something about football before you make stupid comments, nerd.

Anonymous said...

"Flame me"??? Is that the newest x-men reference that the nerds are saying these days.

Anonymous said...

I agree with the first guy. Second guy, you're an ignorant homer who just doesn't get it. You ask the first poster to go to hell? Why? Why would anyone wanna hang out with a loser like you for all eternity?

Anonymous said...

first guy and last guy, go play dungeons and dragons somewhere and flame each other with 20 sided dice. Leave football to the big boys.