My game ball goes to the defensive backfield. From the telecast, all you could see was their QB scanning the field, not finding anyone open, then running for his life or throwing an interception. Over and over again. Not to mention the three picks (shoulda been four). Did Nohl's so-called PI in the end zone remind anyone of Dante Hughes's infamously consequential 2006 play in Tucson?
Second game ball to Buchanan. His first career FBS vs FBS game in a hostile Jordan-Hare, and he came to play ball.
Third game ball to Fernando, for a heady and gutsy overall performance. At one point on the telecast, they mentioned that his 90% completion percentage in the first half was the best by a Cal QB in 20 years. Most of us know who the Cal QB was AND the 2004 game in which he had an amazing half, completion-wise. I wish they had mentioned it on the broadcast - it is great for recruiting to have alums Rodgers and Goff name-dropped, at every possible opportunity. On the telecast, they also mentioned his nickname on the team is "the Mayor" and that his teammates think he'll be POTUS someday. Anyone have the inside scoop on that? Is he just universally loved and respected by his teammates?
Fourth game ball to Brady and Hunter, the WRs. One is a jr transfer from a mid-major and the other a frosh. Those guys played like veterans! Both came up with some tough catches, with no drops that I can recall. Brady might be the team leader in receptions and tbh he wasn't on my radar at all when the season started. For Hunter's part, I think he has 3 TD catches this season already! That's gotta be among the early leaders nationally.
Fifth game ball to Lachlan Wilson. What a weapon. His performance reminded me of a pro golfer who just has his wedge game dialed in with perfect distance and spin control.
Coe obviously did not have a great game. But I am pretty optimistic about him. Every single KO was a touchback, I think. His PATs looked routine, something we couldn't say at the beginning of last year (the 2023 Auburn game, e.g.). And his FGs were well struck, just pushed a bit right. That is correctable. The shorter miss was nice and high (harder to block). And the longer miss had distance to spare despite being from 55 yards. And what was interesting and encouraging to me is that his kicks do not have a natural "draw" or "hook" like so many kickers have. It is a pretty straight ball flight. That has got to be more manageable in the long run than a pronounced hook. Let's not lose faith in this guy. I think he has NFL leg talent, even if his accuracy on this day didn't bear that out.
I also want to say something positive about our center's snaps. For a guy who normally plays guard, he did a creditable job. Yes, we seemed to have a bunch of cadence/snap count issues in the first quarter, but it looked like they switched to the system where the guard taps the center on the leg when the QB is ready for the snap, and they got it cleaned up. Yes, some of his snaps floated or were off target but we had zero fumbles off the snap, which is more than the other team can say. Center is one of the toughest positions on the field, calling out blocking assignments for the OL on the fly, and then trying to remember the snap count as well as his own blocking assignment. Not as easy as it sounds, especially under physical duress. It wasn't an all-pro performance but he didn't lose the game for us - can we really demand more from a third-string center playing out of position?