Disappointed, yes, but determined, too
BC to make the most of Motor City Bowl
By Michael Vega, Globe Staff, 12/26/2002
hen the season began, this was not the bowl Boston College's football team had in mind. The Eagles had much higher aspirations than the Motor City Bowl in Detroit.
There were designs on a 10-win season, the Big East title, and, perhaps, a shot at a Bowl Championship Series bowl.
But as those goals fell by the wayside one by one during BC's 8-4 campaign, it was apparent the best the Eagles could hope for was a berth in the San Francisco Bowl New Year's Eve.
However, those plans were scratched when Notre Dame was knocked out of a BCS berth in a humbling loss at Southern Cal, and Washington State crunched UCLA to clinch the Pacific-10 title and a Rose Bowl berth the Trojans had coveted. It set into motion a chain of events that got BC squeezed out of San Francisco by 9-4 Virginia Tech and dispatched to Detroit.
''I don't know if Detroit was where everyone wanted to go for Christmas, but it doesn't matter,'' said BC senior quarterback Brian St. Pierre. ''We played in Nashville last year around Christmas and it was cold there, too.''
It was certainly colder than Honolulu, where BC spent Christmas 2000. But who would have thought this trip to the Motor City would leave the Eagles longing for the Music City?
And so, instead of jetting out to the Bay Area to play in the San Francisco Bowl, BC will square off today against Toledo, the West Division champions of the Mid-American Conference, in the Motor City Bowl at 5 p.m. at Ford Field, the new indoor home of the Detroit Lions.
''Definitely, you'd rather go to San Francisco than Detroit,'' said BC junior linebacker Josh Ott. ''It's a much more attractive destination, but as a team, we're going to have fun wherever we go. It is about football and it is about being together as a team one more time and making the best of what we have. So I don't think we're going to be too disappointed about where we're going once we get there.''
It is, after all, much better than the alternative: staying home for the holidays.
''Yeah, we could be disappointed that we're not going to San Francisco, or we can be excited that we're not staying home,'' Ott said. ''I think that's the way we have to look at it, as another opportunity.''
And that's precisely how BC's departing class of fourth- and fifth-year seniors is looking upon its unprecedented fourth consecutive bowl trip. With a win over Toledo, this group of seniors could tie the 1981-84 and 1983-86 BC groups for most wins (32) in a four-year period.
''I think I speak for the rest of the seniors when I say we're very proud that we had a big part in the resurrection of this program, especially the fifth-year guys,'' St. Pierre said. ''When we came here, the gambling scandal had just happened two years previous and we were coming off a 4-7 season and times were pretty dark around here. It was pretty lean.
''We're proud of the fact we turned it around where we expect to go to bowl games every year and we're trying to win eight or nine games every year competing against really good teams.''
BC's 20-16 triumph over 16th-ranked Georgia in last year's Music City Bowl was momentous for the Eagles, snapping a 22-game losing skein against ranked opponents.
''That was a huge game,'' St. Pierre said. ''I mean, no one gave us a chance going in to beat Georgia, which was easily one of the best teams I've played against since I've been at BC. We gutted one out and we won a game that, on paper, we shouldn't have, but we did. It got us into the Top 25 for the first time in a while around here. Hopefully, if we can get our ninth win, we can jump up there again this year.''
Toledo, though, will have similar aspirations. The Rockets (9-4) will be looking to record their third consecutive 10-win season when they defend their Motor City title in their first meeting with BC.
''They're huge up front,'' said BC coach Tom O'Brien, noting the gargantuan size of Toledo's offensive line, which, from left to right tackle, goes 320, 318, 291, 319, and 353 pounds. ''They've got very good running backs, two little guys [5-foot-10-inch, 180-pound redshirt freshman Trinity Dawson and 5-8, 180-pound true freshman Astin Martin] who hide well behind those big guys and make some runs.
''Their quarterback [Brian Jones] has completed something like 70 percent of his passes [270 of 382 for 3,115 yards and 21 touchdowns], so they're doing a good job of throwing and catching the ball,'' O'Brien added. ''Nobody can stop 'em, so they'll be a great challenge for our defense. They're a good football team.''
And while Toledo's offense has averaged 36.2 points and 475.2 yards per game, its defense has been susceptible to giving up huge numbers as well: 25.2 points and 353.9 yards total offense.
''They're Temple, they're Virginia Tech,'' O'Brien said of Toledo's defense. ''They play eight-, nine-man fronts and they're always going to outnumber us in the box. There's a lot more blitzing than either Temple or Virginia Tech. We've faced similar defenses against other teams, so it's just a matter of us executing the way we did against those teams.
''We have to play our best game, because if we don't play well, we're not going to win the game.''
Which, no doubt, will leave the Eagles wishing they had stayed home for Christmas instead of going to Detroit.
Motor City Bowl
Who: Boston College vs. Toledo
When: 5 p.m.
Where: Ford Field, Detroit
TV & radio: ESPN, WEEI (850)
BC to make the most of Motor City Bowl
By Michael Vega, Globe Staff, 12/26/2002
hen the season began, this was not the bowl Boston College's football team had in mind. The Eagles had much higher aspirations than the Motor City Bowl in Detroit.
There were designs on a 10-win season, the Big East title, and, perhaps, a shot at a Bowl Championship Series bowl.
But as those goals fell by the wayside one by one during BC's 8-4 campaign, it was apparent the best the Eagles could hope for was a berth in the San Francisco Bowl New Year's Eve.
However, those plans were scratched when Notre Dame was knocked out of a BCS berth in a humbling loss at Southern Cal, and Washington State crunched UCLA to clinch the Pacific-10 title and a Rose Bowl berth the Trojans had coveted. It set into motion a chain of events that got BC squeezed out of San Francisco by 9-4 Virginia Tech and dispatched to Detroit.
''I don't know if Detroit was where everyone wanted to go for Christmas, but it doesn't matter,'' said BC senior quarterback Brian St. Pierre. ''We played in Nashville last year around Christmas and it was cold there, too.''
It was certainly colder than Honolulu, where BC spent Christmas 2000. But who would have thought this trip to the Motor City would leave the Eagles longing for the Music City?
And so, instead of jetting out to the Bay Area to play in the San Francisco Bowl, BC will square off today against Toledo, the West Division champions of the Mid-American Conference, in the Motor City Bowl at 5 p.m. at Ford Field, the new indoor home of the Detroit Lions.
''Definitely, you'd rather go to San Francisco than Detroit,'' said BC junior linebacker Josh Ott. ''It's a much more attractive destination, but as a team, we're going to have fun wherever we go. It is about football and it is about being together as a team one more time and making the best of what we have. So I don't think we're going to be too disappointed about where we're going once we get there.''
It is, after all, much better than the alternative: staying home for the holidays.
''Yeah, we could be disappointed that we're not going to San Francisco, or we can be excited that we're not staying home,'' Ott said. ''I think that's the way we have to look at it, as another opportunity.''
And that's precisely how BC's departing class of fourth- and fifth-year seniors is looking upon its unprecedented fourth consecutive bowl trip. With a win over Toledo, this group of seniors could tie the 1981-84 and 1983-86 BC groups for most wins (32) in a four-year period.
''I think I speak for the rest of the seniors when I say we're very proud that we had a big part in the resurrection of this program, especially the fifth-year guys,'' St. Pierre said. ''When we came here, the gambling scandal had just happened two years previous and we were coming off a 4-7 season and times were pretty dark around here. It was pretty lean.
''We're proud of the fact we turned it around where we expect to go to bowl games every year and we're trying to win eight or nine games every year competing against really good teams.''
BC's 20-16 triumph over 16th-ranked Georgia in last year's Music City Bowl was momentous for the Eagles, snapping a 22-game losing skein against ranked opponents.
''That was a huge game,'' St. Pierre said. ''I mean, no one gave us a chance going in to beat Georgia, which was easily one of the best teams I've played against since I've been at BC. We gutted one out and we won a game that, on paper, we shouldn't have, but we did. It got us into the Top 25 for the first time in a while around here. Hopefully, if we can get our ninth win, we can jump up there again this year.''
Toledo, though, will have similar aspirations. The Rockets (9-4) will be looking to record their third consecutive 10-win season when they defend their Motor City title in their first meeting with BC.
''They're huge up front,'' said BC coach Tom O'Brien, noting the gargantuan size of Toledo's offensive line, which, from left to right tackle, goes 320, 318, 291, 319, and 353 pounds. ''They've got very good running backs, two little guys [5-foot-10-inch, 180-pound redshirt freshman Trinity Dawson and 5-8, 180-pound true freshman Astin Martin] who hide well behind those big guys and make some runs.
''Their quarterback [Brian Jones] has completed something like 70 percent of his passes [270 of 382 for 3,115 yards and 21 touchdowns], so they're doing a good job of throwing and catching the ball,'' O'Brien added. ''Nobody can stop 'em, so they'll be a great challenge for our defense. They're a good football team.''
And while Toledo's offense has averaged 36.2 points and 475.2 yards per game, its defense has been susceptible to giving up huge numbers as well: 25.2 points and 353.9 yards total offense.
''They're Temple, they're Virginia Tech,'' O'Brien said of Toledo's defense. ''They play eight-, nine-man fronts and they're always going to outnumber us in the box. There's a lot more blitzing than either Temple or Virginia Tech. We've faced similar defenses against other teams, so it's just a matter of us executing the way we did against those teams.
''We have to play our best game, because if we don't play well, we're not going to win the game.''
Which, no doubt, will leave the Eagles wishing they had stayed home for Christmas instead of going to Detroit.
Motor City Bowl
Who: Boston College vs. Toledo
When: 5 p.m.
Where: Ford Field, Detroit
TV & radio: ESPN, WEEI (850)