SJSU game: Some good, some bad

Observations from Saturday's game.
POSITIVE:
- John Hampton appears to be on the team after all. What did he have, 3 catches? Not enough, but at least they looked his way.
- Keylon Kincade and Kris Briggs ran really hard, and they kept going hard until the final whistle, even after each guy fumbled. Hats off to them.
- Allan Adami was awesome. Again. Surprise player of the year, by far.
- Ryan Mentzel had some huge bombs. I don't know his average, but they sure looked good.
- Jonas Rutledge looked like Coach Bennett got his attention by starting Rolando Humphrey. Jonas had his best game of the year, on defense and on special teams. If he makes that interception in the last minute of the first half, we're all spending our Sunday recovering from last night's victory celebration. I'm not blaming the loss on Jonas, because he made some great plays. But one more sure would have been nice.
- In the first half, our offensive line blew the San Jose defense off the line. That goofy-looking mascot could have run through those holes.
- Trent Stephenson went 3-for-3 on field goals. When's the last time an SMU kicker did that?
- For all the comments on this board (including by me) about how great Adami and Lute Croy have been this year, it's only fair to point out that the defensive ends looked a whole lot better Saturday. Melvin Williams and Khalid Beard got some real push upfield from the right end spot, and Eric Peterson was in on a lot of plays, if not actually making the tackle. Best game of the year by the defensive ends.
NEGATIVE:
- I'm a huge fan of Tate Wallis, but it's time to make a change. Coach Bennett has talked all year about Tate's mechanics, and if he threw the ball over the top, that last interception-touchdown doesn't get picked off. That's just inexcusable. Bartel is taller and has better mechanics, including a much higher release point.
- Play calling: I support Coach Bennett as much as I support Tate, but some of those calls were questionable. Fourth-and-21, and you go for it with 7 (or so) minutes left? I realize Trent Stephenson doesn't have a super-strong leg (hint: McMurtray does), but if you kick the field goal, you might make it, pulling within 1 point. If you miss, you give them the ball in the same place as you do when Cody Cardwell comes up short on that catch. And you don't burn the timeout, which we could have used later.
- Substitutions: Bartel has a big arm, but throwing a kid in the game for his first college snap when it's third-and-17 with the team needing a miracle is a really tough spot to put him in.
- Brad Keischnick got called for a personal foul when he clobbered a guy after we had a 20-yard run (by Briggs, I think). We still had a first down, but he cost us yards with nothing more than a mental mistake. Coach Bennett ripped him on the sideline, and rightly so.
- Tackling was better, but still not good enough.
- Killer instinct, obviously, wasn't there. It was hard to tell if the Ponies were so excited that they stopped concentrating or if they were unsure how to put their boot across the opponent's throat and end it quickly. Either way, the team still needs to learn how to win.
And they will.
GO MUSTANGS!
POSITIVE:
- John Hampton appears to be on the team after all. What did he have, 3 catches? Not enough, but at least they looked his way.
- Keylon Kincade and Kris Briggs ran really hard, and they kept going hard until the final whistle, even after each guy fumbled. Hats off to them.
- Allan Adami was awesome. Again. Surprise player of the year, by far.
- Ryan Mentzel had some huge bombs. I don't know his average, but they sure looked good.
- Jonas Rutledge looked like Coach Bennett got his attention by starting Rolando Humphrey. Jonas had his best game of the year, on defense and on special teams. If he makes that interception in the last minute of the first half, we're all spending our Sunday recovering from last night's victory celebration. I'm not blaming the loss on Jonas, because he made some great plays. But one more sure would have been nice.
- In the first half, our offensive line blew the San Jose defense off the line. That goofy-looking mascot could have run through those holes.
- Trent Stephenson went 3-for-3 on field goals. When's the last time an SMU kicker did that?
- For all the comments on this board (including by me) about how great Adami and Lute Croy have been this year, it's only fair to point out that the defensive ends looked a whole lot better Saturday. Melvin Williams and Khalid Beard got some real push upfield from the right end spot, and Eric Peterson was in on a lot of plays, if not actually making the tackle. Best game of the year by the defensive ends.
NEGATIVE:
- I'm a huge fan of Tate Wallis, but it's time to make a change. Coach Bennett has talked all year about Tate's mechanics, and if he threw the ball over the top, that last interception-touchdown doesn't get picked off. That's just inexcusable. Bartel is taller and has better mechanics, including a much higher release point.
- Play calling: I support Coach Bennett as much as I support Tate, but some of those calls were questionable. Fourth-and-21, and you go for it with 7 (or so) minutes left? I realize Trent Stephenson doesn't have a super-strong leg (hint: McMurtray does), but if you kick the field goal, you might make it, pulling within 1 point. If you miss, you give them the ball in the same place as you do when Cody Cardwell comes up short on that catch. And you don't burn the timeout, which we could have used later.
- Substitutions: Bartel has a big arm, but throwing a kid in the game for his first college snap when it's third-and-17 with the team needing a miracle is a really tough spot to put him in.
- Brad Keischnick got called for a personal foul when he clobbered a guy after we had a 20-yard run (by Briggs, I think). We still had a first down, but he cost us yards with nothing more than a mental mistake. Coach Bennett ripped him on the sideline, and rightly so.
- Tackling was better, but still not good enough.
- Killer instinct, obviously, wasn't there. It was hard to tell if the Ponies were so excited that they stopped concentrating or if they were unsure how to put their boot across the opponent's throat and end it quickly. Either way, the team still needs to learn how to win.
And they will.
GO MUSTANGS!