The good and the bad from the opener
MARK NELKE | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 4 months AGO
Mark Nelke covers high school and North Idaho College sports, University of Idaho football and other local/regional sports as a writer, photographer, paginator and editor at the Coeur d’Alene Press. He has been at The Press since 1998 and sports editor since 2002. Before that, Mark was the one-man sports staff for 16 years at the Bonner County Daily Bee in Sandpoint. Earlier, he was sports editor for student newspapers at Spokane Falls Community College and Eastern Washington University. Mark enjoys the NCAA men's basketball tournament and wiener dogs — and not necessarily in that order. | September 4, 2013 9:00 PM
They talked about it all last week, Idaho football coach Paul Petrino said earlier this week in his weekly news conference with local media.
The Vandals were going to score on their first drive last Saturday at North Texas, kick and recover an onside kick, then score again for a quick 14-0 lead and see how the home team could recover from that.
Idaho got the first part right, scoring on its first possession for a 6-0 lead (the PAT attempt was blocked), then recovered the onside kick. But the Vandals couldn't finish off the next drive, and never scored again in a 40-6 loss in Petrino's debut as Vandal coach.
"We thought we had a great chance to get the onside," Petrino said.
But a delay of game and a holding penalty led to the next drive fizzling out.
After North Texas scored to take a 7-6 lead, Jerrel Brown broke a 47-yard run, but the Vandals came up a yard short on fourth and 3 from the Mean Green 21.
"Those are all three drives where you need to come away with touchdowns, and you're in a lot better shape," Petrino said.
Also, the Vandals, because in part of mistakes getting the right no-huddle personnel on the field, used all three first-half timeouts in the first 2 minutes, 40 seconds of the game.
"And to be honest with you, we still haven't called the third timeout," Petrino said. "We used two of them - the third one was a mystery one. I don't where it came from, but, regardless, we can't let that happen."
Evaluating Chad: Chalich, a redshirt freshman quarterback from Coeur d'Alene High, completed 19 of 27 passes for 230 yards and a touchdown. He was sacked four times and fumbled twice, losing both.
Petrino liked that Chalich completed 70 percent of his passes - pretty good for someone making his first college start.
"He really only missed two throws - he missed a post that could have been a 93-yard touchdown. And he missed an out," Petrino said. "What he's got to work on is his decision making, because there were a lot of first- and second-down calls where we had easy completions if he could have got the ball out of his hand quick, and he was looking at the wrong thing, or he just took off and ran. But he's got to take more of those easy completions that were out there."
Backup quarterback Josh McCain came in late in the game, rushed twice for 24 yards, and threw incomplete on his only pass attempt.
"Going into the game I told both Chad and Josh there was a chance I could use Josh earlier in the game and a lot of times just to give Chad a rest and take some hits off of him and let Josh try to make some plays with his speed," Petrino said. "And it ended up just being something I didn't do until later, but there's a chance it could happen earlier in the game (at Wyoming)."
Chalich rushed 16 times for 42 yards, which includes 18 yards lost on the four sacks. Asked if he'd like to see Chalich run out of bounds rather than challenge the tackler when he runs, Petrino replied, "the day he has to run out of bounds, or slide, he won't be our quarterback."
Other bright spots: Petrino singled out wide receiver Dezmon Epps, who caught seven passes for 89 yards; Brown, who totaled 70 yards on six carries, and tight end Michael LaGrone, who had a big catch early in the game, and blocked well.
"With the offense there were situations where we'd have one, two, three good plays in a row, and on the fourth play we'd shoot ourselves in the foot," he said. "Either with a silly penalty or a missed assignment, or a missed read. They didn't do anything to stop us."
As for the defense ... : Petrino spoke of them being "more disciplined with their eyes," as far as reading their keys from the offense.
"We've got to do a better job of limiting yards after catch," he said. "We had a lot of second- and third-and-longs, and you've just got to be sure you make the tackle if they don't complete it, and definitely not get a pass interference on third and 23 on a 6-yard throw. That hurt us because it was only 14-6 and it ended up being an 18-play drive where they kept the ball forever."
Reality check: Petrino noted of the 64 players who traveled for the North Texas game, 32 had never been in an FBS (Division I-level) football game.
"We're young; there were a lot of guys that looked like the deer-in-the-headlights out there at times, and that's can't happen. ... just play and pull the trigger, and not be tentative."
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“The whole process has been completely amazing,” said Nathan Williams, now in his fourth season as the Badgers boys basketball coach. “And the parents … it’s an hour and a half to Spokane, Coeur d’Alene, when we’d play an AAU game, and an hour and a half back, and there were so many times there was 6, 8 inches of snow. And we’ve got a game at 8 a.m. They’d always schedule us at 8 a.m., coming from Bonners. So we’re waking up at 5 … it was crazy. But the commitment from the parents and the kids has been amazing.”